Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 16

Thread: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

  1. #1
    schafphoto's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Ventura, California
    Posts
    278

    New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    RE: New paper required for digital print cards.
    The June 2015 update to the Heritage Documentation Programs Historic American Buildings Survey Photography Guidelines November 2011, updated June 2015 state:
    "Digital contact prints can be made from TIFFs by scanning the film and printing it on 100 percent cotton, acid-free matte paper using pigment or carbon inks on an inkjet printer. The paper/printer/ink combination used for the digital prints must have a permanency rating of 150 years or greater by an independent rating organization.”

    This is a substantial change from the previously recommended Epson 5-Star Matte paper to something much more stable and more than three times as expensive. The guidelines do not specify thickness or that optical brighteners should be avoided, but since they degrade and yellow over hundreds of years, my preference would be to use a “Natural” paper not one labeled “Bright White” that is equivalent to the heavy stock (10+ mil) used on traditional mount cards or the last recommended paper (Epson 5-star was 51 lb - 10.3 mil).

    From my research I have found 8.5x11 Arista 100% cotton paper on the Freestyle site:
    Arista-II Fine Art Natural Cotton Inkjet Paper
    330 gsm , 10-15 mil, 8.5x11/20 sheets - Matte...
    100% cotton, acid free.
    at $18.00 for 20 sheets

    or Epson Hot Press Natural Inkjet Paper 8.5x11/25 Sheets
    100% cotton, 17 mil, smooth matte, 25 sheets for $23.00

    These papers are available at about a dollar a sheet with tax and the occasional missfeed. Does anyone have any other suggestions for a budget-priced, 100% cotton paper, (without optical brighteners which will go yellow eventually) That will meet the new HABS / HAER / HALS standards?

    Thanks
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails schaf_photo-LX5-1000219-1.jpg  
    `
    –Stephen Schafer HABS | HAER | HALS & Architectural Photography | Ventura, California | www.HABSPHOTO.com

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    North Dakota
    Posts
    1,327

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Don't they know there is no such thing as a "digital contact print" without making a digital negative first?

  3. #3

    Join Date
    Feb 2015
    Location
    Dallas, Texas
    Posts
    330

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Stephen,

    Thanks for this post. I didn't realize that the specification for the digital print had changed. How do you find the Epson Hot-Press vs the Arista-II Fine Art cotton? Did you find any other options?

    Paul
    Dallas Texas HABS / HAER / HALS Photography
    Photographer/Author Marfa Flights: Aerial Views of Big Bend Country (Texas A&M University Press)
    Petroleum Oil Pics

  4. #4
    schafphoto's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Ventura, California
    Posts
    278

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Hi Paul,

    When I pressed the issue with HDP, they admitted that Jarob's using the Epson 5-star bright white matte. When I pointed out that 5-star doesn't meet their own requirements, they said they would look into it. My understanding is that the UV brighteners in the prints will fade if exposed to UV light, so the prints will eventually dull and perhaps even yellow. But the pigment inks will hold and the paper base of the 5-star enhanced matte will last for a least a century. These prints are not on display they may last 200. On another note, don't bother to punch holes in the prints, they are no longer going in 3-ring binders in the Prints and Photographs Reading Room at the Library of Congress.
    I'm getting 250 sheet boxes of the paper at Adorama. Sometimes you can get a 50 sheet box on sale at $11.00 but they are usually $17.00 I have tried the thicker papers in new Epson Surecolor P600 and the feeding didn't go well, so they will be getting 5-star until I hear from them.

    -Schaf
    `
    –Stephen Schafer HABS | HAER | HALS & Architectural Photography | Ventura, California | www.HABSPHOTO.com

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    SoCal
    Posts
    1,067

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Sorry to hijack this thread, I was going to ask what type of printer you use for this and I see it now, Epson Sureshot p600.

    I want to learn about digital printing. Can you tell me what type of inks you use for that? Would love to be able to print 5x7's and 8x10's to give a presents this year.
    --

  6. #6
    schafphoto's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Ventura, California
    Posts
    278

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Quote Originally Posted by ericantonio View Post
    Epson Surecolor p600.

    I want to learn about digital printing. Can you tell me what type of inks you use for that? Would love to be able to print 5x7's and 8x10's to give a presents this year.
    All the Epson pigment printers take specific Epson cartridges with no reliable choice or options. If you are looking for a printer and want archival, get a printer with pigment inks. If you want super saturated and 25 years is long enough then you have cheaper options like dye-based ink printers.

    Canon and Epson would be my choice

    -Schaf
    `
    –Stephen Schafer HABS | HAER | HALS & Architectural Photography | Ventura, California | www.HABSPHOTO.com

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Washington D.C.
    Posts
    288

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Schaf,

    These papers are available at about a dollar a sheet with tax and the occasional missfeed.

    For a high quality archival 8.5 x 11 paper, a dollar a sheet is not unreasonable. Missfeeds are almost never a result of the paper and almost always caused by how the printer is set up/functions. I think that you should focus less on cost (most papers worth printing on will be within 15 cents/sheet of each other) and more on which papers suit your vision. If you really are concerned with cost, lower your cost of printing by having a custom profiles made for any of your papers you are using. This will allow you to obtain much better print quality with fewer attempts (i.e. test prints) to get the result you want. In the long run that will save you a ton of money on paper and ink, it will pay for itself.

    My understanding is that the UV brighteners in the prints will fade if exposed to UV light...

    The optical brighteners you are referring to are not archival. They do fade over time although I don't think that means they actually yellow, just that they will degrade over time. This means they will lose there effectiveness as a brighter and makes them not meet the HABS / HAER / HALS standards. I personally don't print with any paper that has optical brighteners.

    You mentioned Freestyle in your post and I see you are in Ventura, very close to LA. Do yourself a favor and check the next time Freestyle is giving a World of Inkjet Paper Seminar by Eric Joseph. If they are not holding one in LA anytime soon (they are held on the road most of the time) contact Eric Joseph directly. Tell him you would like to swing by Freestyle and pick his brain about papers. Bring a couple of digital files on a thumb drive and he will probably even print a few samples for you of your own photographs on different papers. Eric is an unbelievable resource for inkjet printing. The fact that he is so close to you is a huge benefit that you should take advantage of.

    If you do see him tell him I sent you, I have done a ton of business with Eric and Freestyle.

    -Joshua

  8. #8
    multiplex
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    local
    Posts
    5,358

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    i still find it remarkable that HABS/HAER/HALS is accepting ink jet prints.
    my regional SHPO offices mainly want files burned to disk and ink jet prints
    which makes absolutely no sense to me. having had conversations years ago
    with jack boucher he had somethings to say about all of this. ...

  9. #9
    schafphoto's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Ventura, California
    Posts
    278

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    My understanding is that the UV brighteners in the prints will fade if exposed to UV light...

    The optical brighteners you are referring to are not archival. They do fade over time although I don't think that means they actually yellow, just that they will degrade over time. This means they will lose there effectiveness as a brighter and makes them not meet the HABS / HAER / HALS standards. I personally don't print with any paper that has optical brighteners.
    -Joshua[/QUOTE]

    Hi Joshua,

    Most of my knowledge about ink jet papers is from questions asked of Eric on numerous phone calls and visits to Freestyle. If the papers dull over time it does not mean they will meet HABS/HAER/HALS standards, they might just have a base white like the cotton papers. The standards are not being enforced at the moment. HABS/HAER/HALS themselves are using Epson 5-star matte, so I’ve decided to let HABS/HAER/HALS specify a new paper that will suit their government budget and archival standards. I’ve been working with HABS/HAER/HALS on updates and changes since November, nothing new since 2015. (except that you don’t need to punch holes in the prints any more).

    My mis-feeds are one in 50 sheets when using the top multi-sheet feeder. Usually a roller transport glitch, often the paper was fed through blank and can be put back in the feeder. Mis-feeding is not as big a problem as my own user error. I have bought two Epson Surecolor p600s. They have both failed (error 0x53) after about 600 prints the plastic drive gear on the feed breaks and the printer is rendered useless. Both printers have been replaced by Epson under warranty. I now load fewer pages (about 10) into the multi-sheet feeder on top, whereas i used to put more in the feeder, this may not fix the cheap-plastic-feed-gear problem but I hope to get more than a year out of these two replacements. Jarob at HDP bought a Surecolor P800 and said he was happy with that (i didn’t have the room).

    The problem with the thicker papers in the P600 is that my printer head hits the sides of the thicker cotton sheets when using the multi-sheet feeder because the paper is not bending as sharply upon intake. This can be solved by using the rear single-sheet feeder but on a typical project where I am printing 100 to 300 sheets you can imagine how labor intensive sitting by the printer would be.

    As for calibration, now that my monitor is calibrated, my prints look good straight out of Lightroom on the Surecolor p600. By far the biggest errors are “ID10T” errors caused by me forgetting to do something simple. ;-)

    At the moment HABS/HAER/HALS seems less worried about the prints and still is looking at the negatives as the 500-year archival artifact. Their latest guidance was that the prints are proofs of the negatives, and there is not the expectation that the prints will have a life Expectancy of 500 years (LE500), that’s how they justified the ink-jet print change. The Library of Congress does high resolution scans from the delivered negatives for dissemination to the public through the LoC website. While the delivered prints can be viewed at the LoC Prints and Photographs Reading Room at the Madison Building, I believe they are kept in boxes or folders away from the light. In this way the UV brighteners will have a longer time to decay before they loose their “glow.” (Print half-life?)

    Jack Boucher would be happy that we are still using silver film in 2018 with all its archival qualities, however the new born-digital capture standards are being developed now, and I can imagine that Jack wouldn't approve. I wish I had met him.

    -Schaf
    `
    –Stephen Schafer HABS | HAER | HALS & Architectural Photography | Ventura, California | www.HABSPHOTO.com

  10. #10
    multiplex
    Join Date
    Feb 2001
    Location
    local
    Posts
    5,358

    Re: New HABS HAER HALS 100% cotton digital print requirements.

    Quote Originally Posted by schafphoto View Post
    At the moment HABS/HAER/HALS seems less worried about the prints and still is looking at the negatives as the 500-year archival artifact. Their latest guidance was that the prints are proofs of the negatives, and there is not the expectation that the prints will have a life Expectancy of 500 years (LE500), that’s how they justified the ink-jet print change. The Library of Congress does high resolution scans from the delivered negatives for dissemination to the public through the LoC website. While the delivered prints can be viewed at the LoC Prints and Photographs Reading Room at the Madison Building, I believe they are kept in boxes or folders away from the light. In this way the UV brighteners will have a longer time to decay before they loose their “glow.” (Print half-life?)

    Jack Boucher would be happy that we are still using silver film in 2018 with all its archival qualities, however the new born-digital capture standards are being developed now, and I can imagine that Jack wouldn't approve. I wish I had met him.

    -Schaf
    i only met him by phone schaf
    he was really intense and knew me by name and project/s i had submitted. we had a long talk about "stuff"
    (this is about 10 years ago) he was pretty sceptical ( understatement ) about the whole digital-thing. what is really strange
    is that even though the ink/pigment images are a proof to view &c that they require such high standards for them, knowing they
    aren't going to last very long. xerox images have an archival life higher than pigment based prints. to me at least, and i am a digital amateur
    it would make more sense to have high quality xerox images than ink jet ones. ... ive seen xerox prints that rival any masterfully printed black and white silver print ...
    i wish i could remember his name / website / article about him but there is someone with an 11x14 xeroxographic camera who makes mind blowing xerox prints.
    ( sorry for the mild detour !! )

Similar Threads

  1. Requirements and standards for HABS/HAER photography
    By Steve Singleton in forum Darkroom: Film, Processing & Printing
    Replies: 53
    Last Post: 10-Aug-2020, 06:39
  2. NEW 2011 Guidelines for large-format HABS, HAER, HALS
    By schafphoto in forum Digital Processing
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 22-Nov-2011, 06:56
  3. HABS/HAER digital printing
    By greenetee photo in forum Digital Processing
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 6-Apr-2011, 11:09
  4. Replies: 27
    Last Post: 30-Aug-2010, 13:13
  5. HABS/HAER in Canada
    By Collin Orthner in forum On Photography
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 5-Jul-2006, 14:44

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •