The Z-3100 has a setting on the driver that allows you lay down a full bleed or a selective glop coating, just on the image area - econo option) below max white. Max white gets left alone on the selection option. This really guts down the amount used and is a great way to conserve on the fluid. Unless you have large areas of blown out white in the file, you can't see where the glop begins. In either case you don't see the glop as a seperate surface. john --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Michael T. Murphy" <uriel_bear@...> wrote: > > > "Michael King" <drmrking@> wrote: > > > > But if you look carefully at the IGFS margins > > beyond the GLOP you'll see that they are a bit > > blotchy with what I presume is GLOP splash or > > from Glop on your rollers. Angled into the light > > Yes, I have seen that on the prints I received also. > > The simple solution would be to go to a full-bleed GLOP. Not sure what > that will do to the printer though, in terms of cleaning and > contamination. > > I am still pondering the prints. Ill post an additional reply > eventually. I want to wait until I have something more to add than > just what my personal preferences are (warmer, cooler, etc.) > > Best, > Michael >
Message
Re: [Digital BW] K7 Gloss Order Link
2008-04-14 by john dean
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.