The more papers you try, the more different tones you will see from the same inkset. Some are subtle but others very obvious. It was much the same with darkroom papers at one time. All part of the digital experience now :-) Regards Duane --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Rem Roberti" <remegius@...> wrote: > > I'm almost embarrased to admit this, but the problem ended up being > the paper! I had been printing with Kodak paper, with totally neutral > results. Yesterday I bought a box of Kirkland Professional Glossy at > Costco. The prints using this paper were distinctly warm compared to > the Kodak paper. The difference was so dramatic that I assumed that > something had gone wrong with either my Photoshop setup, or with the > printer. As a newbie I am a little surprised by all of this---that > there would be such a difference inherent in the papers themselves. I > certainly can see how color settings, driver settings, and the carts > themselves could make a difference in the print outcome. I wasn't > counting on the paper being the culprit. > > Rem >
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Re: What went wrong?
2006-05-18 by dlruckus
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