Hi, so finally getting a printer together for the Piezography inks i have, just wondering if there are any test print images out there that can show the best a Piezography print can do?
thanks
Hi, so finally getting a printer together for the Piezography inks i have, just wondering if there are any test print images out there that can show the best a Piezography print can do?
thanks
What does the Piezography vendor recommend or display ?
I have not yet found any recommendation on their sites.
The best it can do will be determined on how good you are.. the ink on paper is established as world class so make sure you deliver the info to the printer.
Thanks for reply.
yes how good i am will make a difference which is why i am looking for a baseline. As i understand piezograph shows more detail, especially in shadows and greater tone differentiation, so would a test print such one in link below be able to show these features to the full?
http://www.northlight-images.co.uk/a...st_images.html
thanks
Another feature of piezography is very fine gradation in the highlights. Smooth tones and detail in the lightest grays before you get to paper white. Like in the clouds in the seascape in the image you linked. A good test image should ample information at both ends of the scale.
You can buy a test print from Piezography.
David Cary
www.milfordguide.nz
In Photoshop it is easy to make step wedges and gradients. There are many tutorials on the web which show us how.
Given that Piezography uses the Quadtone RIP which drives the printer at 16-bit depth, you should use a 16-bit grayscale file.
If there are any gaps or banding, you will see the discontinuities.
Beyond using your eye, you can also use a spectrophotmeter and take measurements of observed versus expected values.
That's what we do whenever we make our own profiles for Quadtone RIP or any other printer/ink combination, and that's what Mr. Cone did when he made the Piezography profiles.
What you're really checking in the end, is
1. How good is that printer/paper/ink combination: dynamic range, color, color consistency along the tonal scale, metamerism etc.
2. How good is the profile is for that combination printer/paper/ink combination: is it linear ?
Actually if you look for the custom profiling on Piezography and download the package, I think to remember that it contains a tonal scale to print.
I have been thinking about having a custom profile done for the Epson Hot Press Natural but I have really never gone around it.
Hoping that a somewhat popular paper will some time be added to the list of existing profiles...
Cheers,
Luc
Field # ShenHao XPO45 - Monorail # Sinar P, F2[CENTER]6x6 # Minolta 1965 Autocord, 6x9 # Kodak 1946 Medalist II
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