I've got to calm down after that last post; my heart is still churning. I want to be level-headed when i write this. I was thinking today about Paul Roark's post this morning: (snip from paul's post:) The fear that the digital printer can simply press a button and print as many copies as s/he likes with no manual labor probably does lower the price of the product. (Of course, AA just hired legions of assistants to do the printing, but who's counting ....) (end snip) It seems as if we must do something to counter this perception of "just pressing the button and another one pops out". I agree that this has a negative effect. What about this?: What if, when you thought you had a "keeper image", you then sat down and determined an edition number. Then, (just like in the darkroom), you'd make some test prints on the 2200, or whatever printer you're using, and then when you got it perfect, you'd print out THE ENTIRE EDITION in one run, in one day, at one time? To even carry it further, you might even banish the actual file that it was made from from your hard drive when the print run was over. (You might keep a rezzed-down version for PR and Publicity usages, but it might even be watermarked as such). It seems to me that this procedure might make one straighten up, get serious, and realize the goal that's in front of him: he realizes that, at this point, today will be the very last and only time that this image will EVER be printed again. In your documentation, you clearly declare this, in a sentence on your CofA. (Now... this brings up that other issue of what I've heard about, where the old guys, AA, etc. would get sneaky and then come out with a NEW edition in a different SIZE. Is that slimy or what?) So, my approach, listed above, would even supercede and eliminate that practice of changing sizes later in a new edition. You are saying, TODAY is the ONLY time this image will be printed. Today, I will make twenty, or thirty, or whatever my edition states it is, but then after that, NO MORE. Ever... I would bet that if the top twenty or fifty guys that are known as digital printmakers got together and agreed on this approach, you'd see an immediate shift in the perception of digital printmaking. Overnight. Just a thought, Mark Tucker, http://marktucker.com
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Printing for Editions?
2002-11-17 by Mark Tucker
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