Sergey, No matter what curve you specify, QTR will not print glop (or any other ink) on pure white. You will need to fix that by hand as described in my post earlier today. Just keep in mind that drawback of this "fix" is that it will put down glop on the entire printable surface of the page, not only the area you think of as your image. Here is a simple proof: print a pure white image. If the printhead starts to move left-right like it is printing something, it is placing glop. If it just spits the page right out of the printer, you have no glop on pure white. Marko On 2010-02-05, at 9:13, santonov2you wrote: > > > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Marko Milisavljevic <marko.mili@...> wrote: > > > > You can force QTR to put glop in 255 white areas by doing the following: > > Thanks, Marco. > > I am placing glop everywhere on paper using "curve" like 0,15;100,20, but it gives different gloss on places with and without inks, that gives some visible gloss difference. It is much less difference than "bronzing" produces, but not as uniform as couple of layers of PrintShield. > > --Sergei > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [Digital BW] Cooled C6 on matte and warmed HP PK C6 on glossy (with DMax 2.86)
2010-02-05 by Marko Milisavljevic
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