Folks, I am new to the forum and have enjoyed reading the recent posts on the R2400. I am a serious amateur (Color and B/W) who made the switch to a digital SLR this summer. I also purchased the R2400 which I plan to use for both color and B/W printing. This is my first real photo printer and my first Epson printer. I am not doing any prepress work, just creating prints to share and (over time) to exhibit and sell. I will work from new DLSR captures and from scans of older film work. I have the latest Photoshop. So far I have tried the Ilford Smooth Pearl and the Epson Premium Semigloss, using the paper manufacturers' R2400 profiles for both. (I will try EEM and VFA eventually.) Other than a tendency for my screen to be more saturated/dark than the print (which others have also mentioned) I am getting attractive results. (BTW, I agree with the person who posted regarding the gloss on the Ilford vs. the Epson -- the gloss differential is much less pronounced on the ilford). I had been assuming that the difference between the screen and the print was due to the fact that my monitor is old (this is a MacG4 with an Apple Studio display -- both about 5 years old and in daily use). The effect is noticeable in both BW and color. I'd be interested to know if the others who have experienced this problem are also using older CRTs or not. I have calibrated/profiled the monitor using Monaco and still have a more saturated and darker screen image compared with my print. I could do a custom profile for the printer/paper combos I am using, but am not sure yet whether that is the solution. So far I have only printed B/W using a color image file and just set the ABW settings in the standard Epson R2400 print driver. (That is, all my profiles stay the same.) I understand there are other ways to create a good B/W image, and I plan to do some reading, but I would be interested in knowing people's opinions about which paths to go down vs. simply using ABW from a color-optimized file (with respect to the R2400, that is), and whether there are resources on that specific topic. So to summarize, my questions are: 1) How can I be SURE I'm getting the best possible range of tones in my printing? Are there standard reference images I should try printing? 2) With respect to the screen differences, are there things I should try doing other than creating a custom profile with my monaco system? 3) For B/W printing on the R2400, what file preparation and printing approaches will be most fruitful? I'm happy to do some experimenting but I don't want to reinvent the wheel. Just give me a pointer to a book or Website if you prefer.... 4) I'm assuming the archival quality of the various RC papers is probably about the same. Am I wrong? Thanks for any advice you can provide to one starting the Digital B/W printing adventure. Linda
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Advice for starting out
2005-08-31 by Linda J. Thorsen
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