Hi Edward. I believe the effect you are seeing is due to chemical interactions between the paper coatings and inks. It varies from paper to paper and is not confined to just the 2200. Print on 10 different papers and you will likely get 10 different tones. It occures just as much with color images but is not very noticeable there while with neutral tones it pops out and becomes very obvious. I suspect it is the reason why so many folks tend to use the same papers and limit their numbers. Sorry you didn't get a better answer. Best. Duane <mastedward@y...> wrote: > > In my continuing struggle to get neutral b&w prints from my Epson > 2200 I accidently discovered that on light-weight photo paper and on > the wrong side (the less-white, coarser side)of heavier weight matte > paper, the prints are quite neutral. On the right side of the matte > paper they have their usual magenta cast. What is happening here? > Does this mean that there may be a particular matte paper on which > the Epson will print neutral blacks? Is it a function of ink > absorption? Edward
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Re: Paper effects on color-cast
2005-02-02 by dlruckus
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