Yahoo Groups archive

Digital BW, The Print

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 22:56 UTC

Message

Re: [Digital BW] How Curves Affect Zero RGB?

2004-07-18 by Steve Kale

Just out of interest, have you created a soft proof for the BO/paper
combination?  If so what happens to the background on screen when you soft
proof (without the s-curve)?

Create a test image ­ a simple 100% white square on 100% black background.
Same thing happens?

You sure there wasn¹t a paper/ink change in the Epson driver between
prints.....


From: "Clayton Jones" <cj@...>
Reply-To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2004 01:30:57 -0000
To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Digital BW] How Curves Affect Zero RGB?

Hello All,

I have an image, a still life, worked up to my satisfaction in PS
using EEM proof paper. The background is solid black, RGB 0 all over.
Can't get any blacker than that.  When I print this (BO with Eboni)
on PR I get what you'd expect - a very deep intense black background.

Now I'm testing a new paper and with the same image the background
looks considerably weaker, so I conclude that this paper has poorer
Dmax than PR.  Just to experiment, I add a curve layer and give it a
bit of a contrast boost to see what happens.  This is a typical
S-curve where the black and white anchor points are not moved.  So all
0 pixels in the background are still zero.  Theoretically nothing in
the background has changed (the rest of the image _has_ changed, of
course).

Now when I print this, the background Dmax has increased considerably,
enough to where I'd think it was a different paper.  What has happened
here?  How can more ink have been put down in an area that was already
solid black?  Of course the other part of the pic is too contrasty -
you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.  But I'd sure like to
understand better what's happening.  Anybody know?

Regards,
Clayton





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Attachments

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.