> One of things I have found most difficult evaluating an inkjet print > (not paper) has been the apparent sensitivity to lighting condition. > So, using an old Minolta color meter, I've been looking at prints > under a 5K light at 450-500 LUX and then walking it around the house, > near windows, and in the kitchen where I have set up an easel under a > combination of window light during the day and both halogen and > incandescent lighting day and night. I have been using largely the > VFA. Hi Walt - this is exactly what I have found - usually giving what I term an unpleasant "magentarism" - not usually a big shift, but noticeable. The biggest culprit seems to be OBA's - which appear to vary in how they are applied in a paper from manufacturer to manufacturer (some in the paper base, some in the coating, some in both). I have also found the Epson UC black also tended to exacerbate this while the MIS Ebony doesn't do so to the same extent. Get a mix of halogen and daylight and it is often particularly noticeable. In all my (reasonably unscientific testing) I have found that non-oba papers certainly seem to give the best results in avoiding this (Arches Infinity, the new Museo Max, the non-oba Innova papers. I find that VFA/USFA while nice is just too low in contrast with blacks that aren't deep enough. And I don't know what Moab does with their non-oba papers, but they just suck in this regard, even without oba's) after that for me, it's finding a non-oba paper which has a type of paper base I am happy with - I've never minded slightly warm, even from the old darkroom days - warm but not too warm. Overall, it seem to be a combination of type and application of oba's, original paper base and ink, in any one of an almost infinite number of variations.... And if you pull out some old darkroom prints on different papers, you will notice that many of them actually do the same in different lights - metamerism isn't anything new - , but to a much lesser degree than coated inkjet papers, so it is generally less noticeable. (and of course many of those papers have OBA's in the to a greater or lesser extent)
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RE: [Digital BW] VFA/USFA & how long it takes me to add 2+2 . . .
2005-11-14 by Timothy Atherton
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