Gary Have you tried "Print to file" and then printed the resulting image through QTR? It gives you the benefit of Qimage's sharpening/resizing but allows you to use the non Epson printer driver. David Whistance -----Original Message----- From: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com [mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of Gary Gervin Sent: 21 October 2008 07:43 To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com Subject: [Digital BW] Re: Qimage Richard, I use Qimage, and there is really only one reason I use it. I think it makes my prints look better. They claim they optimize data sent to the printer better than PS, and it's possible that part of the difference I see is this optimization. But the program also has a very interesting printing-side sharpening filter which seems to outperform anything I've seen anywhere else - in PS or using Focalblade or whatever). Photos look noticeably sharper without looking digitally sharpened at all. Again, I have no idea how much of this is the sharpening filter, and how much is the superiority of their data optimization, but my images flatly look better using it. (I'm using good lenses - Rodenstock and Schneider despite my screen name, and am not making up for lack of good glass or good view camera focusing technique with digital sharpening filters; I am just looking to get the same sharpness I see in my negs onto the paper.) How good is the program at printing sharp images? I have been experimenting with QTR and Cone's K7 inks in my R2400. So far, the main thing that keeps me from switching to the K7 inks permanently is that I have to give up using Qimage, which relies on the Epson drivers to work. When I print with the K7's and QTR, the image is subtly but visibly softer than when I print with Qimage. I think Cone's K7 inks and QTR do a visibly better job of printing than PS, I just think Qimage goes a step further still. I'd probably be happy with QTR and K7 if I had never seen what Qimage will do. That's my 2 cents worth. It is true Qimage is primarily designed for people with a much higher volume than I print and for controlling image placement on the paper. Still, I don't find it's overkill for the less frequent printer to use it for single image printing if it really improves the printed image. Others may have different experience, but if you want one reason to experiment with Qimage, it's that it may make your prints look better than they do already. -Gary Gervin --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Richard Smallfield <r.smallfield@...> wrote: > > Hi, > I have wondered about buying Qimage for a while ... but, being pleased with my > output, have not been able to justify another software purchase. > > Can anyone give three compelling reasons for getting Qimage? I prefer not to > upsample much anyway (and tend to shoot 25-35mp images), so their improved > algorithms may not be that important to me. > > I sometimes print D70 images on 13x19" paper, but even then I'm not sure their > pyramid interpolation would be worth the extra purchase. > > However, there may be some feature that I've not thought of that is really, > realy, really, really (really, really) a bit useful. > > thanks, > Richard > > > > www.richardsmallfield.com > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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RE: [Digital BW] Re: Qimage
2008-10-21 by David Whistance
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