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Digital BW, The Print

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Thread

Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-18 by Jerry Hadam

Hello all,
I am finally getting around to trying to install QTR. I went all  
through Roy's site and the Outbackphoto tutorial that they had on their  
site. The point I am at right now is that I have downloaded the soft  
proofing profiles from Roy's and now I can't find the page that details  
installation of these items.

I am running OSX Panther with Photoshop CS, and Epson 2200 with  
standard inkset (my folder for soft proof reads 2200 QTR UC) on a Mac  
G4 running a 1.5 ghz G4 processor and 1Gb of ram.

The files in the folder look like plugins but read proof on them. Where  
do these go?

Also I am trying to use the bluetooth or my built-in airport stuff to  
wirelessly print to this printer I guess I need a bluetooth print  
server or an Airport extreme print server- anyone have any experience  
with this? (reply personally if you think it is too OT for the list).

Thanks very much,
Jerry

Jerry Hadam
jerry@...
208-726-2942
888-540-8053

In Saddletree Cutsom Framing
Crazy Horse Square-Ketchum

Box 2749
Ketchum, ID 83340


On Oct 16, 2004, at 11:06 AM,  
DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com wrote:

>
>
> There are 14 messages in this issue.
>
> Topics in this digest:
>
>       1. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>            From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@...>
>       2. Re: Film Scanners
>            From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@...>
>       3. StudioPrint, mono color management etc. was How reliable
>            From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@...>
>       4. Re: Re: QTR profiles for 2200 PC users
>            From: Hans Van Rafelghem <hvr@...>
>       5. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>            From: Steve Kale <stevekale@...>
>       6. Re: Film Scanners
>            From: "naturalphoto2001" <emetz45@hotmail.com>
>       7. Re: Film Scanners
>            From: "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@...>
>       8. Re: Film Scanners
>            From: "Andre" <am1000@...>
>       9. Cheap, easy & dontforgetgood
>            From: claudej1@...
>      10. QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
>            From: Daniel Staver <daniel@...>
>      11. QTR for Epson 4000 / Windows
>            From: "Richard Voninski" <voninski@...>
>      12. RE: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
>            From: "Stephen Billard" <stephen@...>
>      13. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>            From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@...>
>      14. QTRGui not retaining page sizes
>            From: "ferdinand_paris" <ferdinand_paris@...>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 1
>    Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 22:36:02 -0700
>    From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@...>
> Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>
> Steve M.,
>
> I get the picture of where you are coming from, and I have no reason to
> dispute your perspective. However, I know there are a lot of serious
> photographers out there (I get piles of e-mail from them) who are  
> interested
> and would become involved but need to see a flat boulevard instead of a
> narrow, steep path in front of them. I think B&W printing today is  
> analogous
> to being into computers in the mid 80�s working from a command line,  
> and it
> will take the equivalent of a GUI to get them to dive in.
>
> Why do I care, simply because of the advantage of numbers. I realize I  
> would
> not have had much of the pro equipment I have worked with over the  
> years if
> it weren�t for all of the enthusiast doctors and lawyers buying 10,  
> 20, 30,
> a 100 times as much product as we pro�s used.  Unless the enthusiasts  
> are
> into this in the numbers that are possible the market size will limit
> development and keep costs higher than they would be otherwise, and a  
> lot of
> neat innovative stuff will never get developed.
>
> Regards, David B. Brooks
> Shutterbug Magazine
> E-mail: fotografx@mindspring.com
>
>
>
>
> On 10/15/04 8:00 PM, "sdmey4@..." <sdmey4@...> wrote:
>
>> David, I agree with all 3 of your paragraphs 100% ;0  I can only add
>> ' affordable, and easy" are pretty subjective. Many ways to skin a  
>> cat so to
>> speak, and I have tried them all from the cheapest to most expensive.  
>> If easy
>> means using someone else's rgb curves on YOUR printer and monitior  
>> than its no
>> wonder there are inconsistencies all over. I'm a big fan of easy and
>> consistancy, so my point is, you have to do it yourself. Printing out  
>> patches
>> and
>> measuring with the eyeone is a breeze, no fuss no muss, just plain  
>> and simple
>> linerized greyscale. What a great place to start.
>> For users who don't have a handle on color management or the  
>> knowledge to
>> write there own perfect RGB curves for conversion, what could be  
>> easier? Those
>> expensive options pay for themselves rather quickly.
>> I lost my taste for the epson driver along time ago, fourtunately I  
>> only use
>> wide format machines now. People think this is too expensive? buts  
>> its really
>> a money saver and easier in so many ways.
>> Steve M.
>>
>> In a message dated 10/15/2004 7:31:30 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
>> fotografx@... writes:
>>
>>>> Steve,
>>>>
>>>> I agree with your first sentence without reservation. However  
>>>> printing
>>> black
>>>> &white is not limited to a �same as� workflow. There is no reason a  
>>>> user
>>>> cannot convert grayscale to RGB and thereby make the workflow  
>>>> process
>>>> amenable to the same controls as color. Several B&W (black ink)  
>>>> options
>>>> employ some aspect of this strategy. For instance the MIS/Paul  
>>>> Roark option
>>>> is a simple one which, although it requires using a �same as� CMS  
>>>> profile
>>>> setting in Photoshop,  also involves a print driver setting of �no  
>>>> color
>>>> adjustment� .  This allows the use of RGB curve files applied to  
>>>> the open
>>>> image which in a broad sense functions in lieu of a profile  
>>>> selection in
>>>> PrintSpace, providing data going to the printer altered to  
>>>> linearize the
>>>> application of CcMmY ink position output.
>>>> Snip >>>>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>>
>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>>
>>
>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other  
>> resources as
>> they are often being updated.
>>
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>>
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>> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting this  
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>> flames.
>> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the  
>> membership
>> without notice.
>> - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of digital  
>> B&W
>> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be removed  
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>> membership.
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>> Owner and
>> Moderators. See ?Group Topic, Rules and Guidelines? in the Files  
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>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 2
>    Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 22:50:53 -0700
>    From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@...>
> Subject: Re: Film Scanners
>
> Robert,
>
> The extra 1400dpi for one does result in smoother, better tonality.  
> And as I
> mentioned regarding grain, the Minolta minimizes apparent graininess  
> very
> considerably. Most of the problems a lot of people have scanning silver
> based B&W film comes from the fact the ramping algorithms in the driver
> software for B&W film are not well developed � most of the R&D by  
> scanner
> companies has been applied to scanning color positives. My solution is  
> to
> scan silver-based black and white as a positive in 48-bit RAW files,  
> which I
> then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a  
> negative
> image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in  
> Shutterbug
> magazine about 3 years ago.
>
> I recently did a couple of hundred 17x22 prints testing the Epson Pro  
> 4000,
> and many of them were 35mm images scanned with the Minolta 5400 with  
> the
> image size printed set at 15x20 inches. When I did all my printing in  
> a wet
> darkroom I seldom printed 35mm larger than 11x14. Now some of those  
> same
> images look even better, larger, after scanning and printing digitally.
>
> Regards, David B. Brooks
> Shutterbug Magazine
> E-mail: fotografx@...
>
>
>
>
> On 10/15/04 10:12 PM, "Robert" <la_native@...> wrote:
>
>>
>> David, thank you for your informative comments.  Given you positive
>> feelings about the Minolta, is there a noticeable difference compared
>> to the older Canon fs4000?  Yes, there's an additional 1,400dpi
>> resolution, but does that provide for better tonality?
>>
>> With my Canon, the best film for scanning is the b&w chromogenics (TCN
>> and Xp-2).  Tri-x and most silver-based films don't look so great --
>> the grain tends to block up and mess with the tone transitions.
>>
>> -Robert Ades
>>
>> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
>> <fotografx@m...> wrote:
>>>> Robert,
>>>>
>>>> Shortly after its announcement I had the opportunity to test and
>> report on
>>>> the Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400, which appeared in Shutterbug
>> magazine
>>>> some issues back. I also tested and reported on the Canon 4000FS
>> some months
>>>> before. I have not reviewed a Nikon scanner for some time, not  
>>>> because I
>>>> have any issue with the scanner itself as it is very fine hardware,  
>>>> but
>>>> because the software is the worst in its class and the scanner is on
>> that
>>>> basis grossly over-priced.
>>>>
>>>> The one outstanding feature, especially applied to scanning B&W
>> silver-based
>>>> film is the 5400dpi optical resolution. That is a distinct  
>>>> advantage not
>>>> just because it will natively support making 16x24 inch by 300dpi
>> scans, but
>>>> the high resolution avoids a pattern interference problem with film
>> grain,
>>>> particularly with grainier film processed with acutance developers  
>>>> (low
>>>> sodium sulfite formula�s) like Acufine and particularly Rodinal. In
>>>> addition, the Minolta has a Grain Dissolver feature which is
>> actually a very
>>>> fine diffusion filter, which combined with the scanners tube light
>> source
>>>> that also reduces apparent graininess and avoids highlight blocking,
>> which
>>>> can occur with some 35mm dedicated scanners with a more collimated  
>>>> light
>>>> source (like the difference printing with a diffusion versus and
>> condenser
>>>> enlarger).
>>>>
>>>> If it makes any difference, being an old f... With 3/4 of my film
>> library in
>>>> B&W, my reaction after testing the Minolta was to ask for invoice
>> sending
>>>> Minolta a check instead of returning the scanner.
>>>>
>>>> Regards, David B. Brooks
>>>> Shutterbug Magazine
>>>> E-mail: fotografx@m...
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 10/15/04 8:07 PM, "Robert" <la_native@h...> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm having the darnest time getting a comprehensive comparison of  
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> Nikon LS5000 and the Minolta 5400 compared to my Canon FS4000.  I  
>>>>>> know
>>>>>> the newer scanners have lots of new features, faster scanning,  
>>>>>> better
>>>>>> bit depth, ICE x 4, etc.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What I want to know is, do either of these scanners work better  
>>>>>> with
>>>>>> B&W negatives, OR pull better shadow detail with slides, than the
>> Canon.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I already have the Canon and can live with its limitations.  But  
>>>>>> I'd
>>>>>> consider upgrading if the image quality were noticeably better.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> All comments w/b appreciated!  Thanks!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Robert Ades
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other
>> resources as
>>>>>> they are often being updated.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
>>>>>>
>>>>>> If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you
>> wish to
>>>>>> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting
>> this same
>>>>>> page.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please follow these basic guidelines:
>>>>>> - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages
>> to keep
>>>>>> them short.
>>>>>> - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or
>> flames.
>>>>>> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the
>> membership
>>>>>> without notice.
>>>>>> - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of
>> digital B&W
>>>>>> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be
>> removed from the
>>>>>> membership.
>>>>>> - By posting on this forum you agree to abide by the group rules  
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> guidelines, and to abide by the actions and decisions of the group
>> Owner and
>>>>>> Moderators. See "Group Topic, Rules and Guidelines" in the Files
>> section:
>>>>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint/files/
>>>>>>
>>>>>> BY PARTICIPATING IN AND/OR POSTING MESSAGES TO THE DIGITAL BW, THE
>> PRINT
>>>>>> YAHOO! GROUP YOU EXPRESSLY UNDERSTAND AND AGREE THAT THE "OWNER"  
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>>>>>> "MODERATORS" OF DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP SHALL NOT BE
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>>>>>> FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR
>> EXEMPLARY
>>>>>> DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF
>> PROFITS, GOODWILL,
>>>>>> USE, DATA OR OTHER INTANGIBLE LOSSES (EVEN IF THE  "OWNER" AND
>> "MODERATORS" OF
>>>>>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE
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>>>>>> DAMAGES), RESULTING FROM: (i) THE USE OR THE INABILITY TO USE THE
>> DIGITAL BW,
>>>>>> THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP; (ii) UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS TO OR ALTERATION
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>>>>>> TRANSMISSIONS OR DATA; (iii) STATEMENTS OR CONDUCT OF ANY THIRD
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>>>>>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP; OR (iv) ANY OTHER MATTER
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>>>>>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
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>>>>>>
>>>>>>
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>>>>>> <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/> .
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other  
>> resources as
>> they are often being updated.
>>
>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
>>
>> If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you wish  
>> to
>> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting this  
>> same
>> page.
>>
>> Please follow these basic guidelines:
>> - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages to  
>> keep
>> them short.
>> - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or  
>> flames.
>> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the  
>> membership
>> without notice.
>> - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of digital  
>> B&W
>> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be removed  
>> from the
>> membership.
>> - By posting on this forum you agree to abide by the group rules and
>> guidelines, and to abide by the actions and decisions of the group  
>> Owner and
>> Moderators. See �Group Topic, Rules and Guidelines� in the Files  
>> section:
>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint/files/
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>> BY PARTICIPATING IN AND/OR POSTING MESSAGES TO THE DIGITAL BW, THE  
>> PRINT
>> YAHOO! GROUP YOU EXPRESSLY UNDERSTAND AND AGREE THAT THE �OWNER� AND
>> �MODERATORS� OF DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP SHALL NOT BE LIABLE  
>> TO YOU
>> FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR  
>> EXEMPLARY
>> DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS,  
>> GOODWILL,
>> USE, DATA OR OTHER INTANGIBLE LOSSES (EVEN IF THE  �OWNER� AND  
>> �MODERATORS� OF
>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE  
>> POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
>> DAMAGES), RESULTING FROM: (i) THE USE OR THE INABILITY TO USE THE  
>> DIGITAL BW,
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>> YOUR
>> TRANSMISSIONS OR DATA; (iii) STATEMENTS OR CONDUCT OF ANY THIRD PARTY  
>> ON THE
>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP; OR (iv) ANY OTHER MATTER RELATING  
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>> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP.
>>
>>
>>
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>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 3
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 06:02:38 -0000
>    From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@...>
> Subject: StudioPrint, mono color management etc. was How reliable
>
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> <fotografx@m...> wrote:
>> Steve M.,
>>
>> Not according to the documentation that is published in the Ergosoft  
>> web
>> site.  They state specifically that it is not ICC compliant. As far
> as I can
>> establish all of the available, commercial RIPS for black and white
> printing
>> are intentionally proprietary, except of course for the Linux GIMP  
>> based
>> solution. From my perspective it is a technical solution dictated by a
>> business model. That model essentially assumes a delimited market
> potential,
>> in part reflected by the printers supported, and which offers
> limited user
>> control or independence. It�s the Polaroid philosophy now perpetuated  
>> as
>> much as they can by Epson.
>
> This requires some clarification, which might effect some of your
> views. What StudioPrint does for quads is really just an extremely
> well executed expansion of features expected in any good RIP. All
> these drivers, even the OEM ones, have the ability to partition. They
> do it from light cyan to cyan, light magenta to magenta, and with the
> UC printers light K to K as well. The good RIPs offer more user
> control, not less, by giving the user options in controling those
> partitions and other controls as well. All good RIPs offer the user
> the ability to linearize each channel, including those made up of a
> light and dark component. This is simply density tuning of the driver
> per channel, not in the icc data path, also a user control not part of
> OEM drivers. ICC profiling is done AFTER the RIP is tuned in this
> manner for the particular printer, inkset, and paper being used.
> All StudioPrint did was add a user selectable monochrome mode, and add
> two more (for now) partitions, a very light black and a very very
> light black. And of course like any good RIP, this channel is also
> hardware linearizable. This has little to do with any color management
> yet. It can be compared to the K only mode in the Epson driver, but
> with that K channel partitionable into multiple inks. As you know,
> when you select K only in the Epson driver, color management in the
> driver is disabled, only gamma adjustments are offered. This makes
> sense as the entire data path is single channel.
> So actually, all that has been done is an expansion of features
> already expected in good RIPs, perhaps what is proprietory is how well
> it has been implemented.
> In fact, the whole system is so user adjustable, it can be made to
> work with practically any inkset on any supported printer. You could
> even, in CMYK mode, used a 4 part quad inkset for K, and still have C,
> M, and Y, inks for toning in a 7 ink printer, or the same with a 3
> part K in a 6 ink printer. All kinds of things are possible, and all
> icc compatable in multichannel modes. It couldn't be more open.
> These are not confinements dictated by a business model, we expect
> these features from all good RIPs. The one that is a bit of a black
> box with little user control, and a lot of secret "magic", is
> ImagePrint, but it's users are quite happy and not complaining, and
> even it is fully icc compliant.
>
>> I am not being critical in terms of what it does, or for that matter
> what
>> several other competitors also do. What I am suggesting is that it
> does not
>> parallel for instance what color management companies do like Monaco,
>> Gretag-Macbeth or ColorVision, which is base their solutions on a
> standard
>> which interfaces seamlessly with  OS based CMS�s� supporting full user
>> independence after purchasing the software/hardware.
>
> Actually David, these companies are what are standing in our way of
> placing color management in our single channel monochromatic data
> path. They offer no way of building single channel luminosity only
> profiling. Single channel icc compliant profiles are possible, but not
> yet a feature of these apps. I have one obscure app that will make
> them, but the printed percentage curves have to be entered by hand,
> not measured in. It will also make what it calls a rich black profile
> from measured color profiles, paper white, K point, the whole deal,
> but this is not what we need.
> As soon as one of these profiling apps allows us to build single
> channel icc profiles made with our measurement devices, we can profile
> any grayscale output device/driver/inkset/paper/etc., and if outputing
> from photoshop, select it as our printer profile and be on our way. If
> printing to a RIP, not out of an app, we'd simply have to convert and
> save before printing, if the RIP or driver is in a currentaly non-icc
> compliant single channel mode, as most of these special monochrome
> drivers are, or SP in quad mode.
> I hope all that makes sense, and if I have misunderstood and gone off
> on a tangent, please accept my apology in advance.
> Tyler
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 4
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 10:08:54 +0200
>    From: Hans Van Rafelghem <hvr@avr-toon.com>
> Subject: Re: Re: QTR profiles for 2200 PC users
>
>
>> It should be possible to see if the profiles are actually the same
>> file with different names by using a file compare routine.  Any chance
>> of getting a copy of the profile from Roy? I wonder why they weren't
>> released.  I find the semi-gloss profiles a bit warm, and am yet to
>> see if I can cool them down enough.
>>
> Yes they are a bit on the brown side.
>
>>
>>
>> The Permajet thing is remarkable.  I tried your suggestion to use this
>> profile for colour in Ilford smooth pearl, and agree that it removes
>> almost all the green cast.  But what is your story this time about how
>> you stumbled across its suitability for B&W?  Are you trying all the
>> new PC profiles for QTR with all the paper combinations, or was it
>> serendipity again?
>>
>>
> No, actually it was Carl who adviced to do so :-) .
>
>> I will try the Permajet profile.  What mixture of cool and warm
>> settings are you using?
>>
>>
>>
> 50% cool - 50% warm
>
>> Thanks.
>>
>> F_P
>>
>>
>>
> -- 
>
> Hans Van Rafelghem
> http://www.vanrafelghem.com
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 5
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:16:59 +0100
>    From: Steve Kale <stevekale@...>
> Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>
> I am sure that the next stage of B&W printing will be to allow a colour
> managed workflow that includes accurate control over the inks but I  
> suspect
> this is not an easy exercise (otherwise I am sure it would be much more
> prevalent today) and will likely take some time.  The solutions that  
> exist
> along these lines today are expensive and inflexible (they don't  
> transport
> to new inks for example).  I have not used Paul's workflow but I  
> understand
> it involves the application of curves to an RGB file to alter the  
> colour
> composition of the file in order to manipulate the inks via a colour  
> driver.
> Hardly a what you see is what you get workflow.  My point was that  
> there
> exists today an easy way to get quite a good softproof from any B&W
> workflow.  It is available to anyone with an Eye-One Photo.  I have  
> found
> that this has taken a lot of the trial and error out of my B&W  
> workflow.  I
> can simply work on an image and then soft proof for the paper I intend  
> to
> use and then apply an adjustment curve so that it then matches my  
> original
> file.  Easy. No more too light/too dark vs screen. Now obviously if my
> display were not correctly calibrated and I have not built soft proof  
> files
> (with Carl's workflow) for my B&W printer output then I would again be
> shooting in the dark.
>
>
>> From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@mindspring.com>
>> Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>> Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 19:29:37 -0700
>> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>> Cc: <stevekale@...>
>> Subject: Re: [Digital BW] How reliable/ precise is your b&w print  
>> workflow?
>>
>>
>> Steve,
>>
>> I agree with your first sentence without reservation. However  
>> printing black
>> & white is not limited to a �same as� workflow. There is no reason a  
>> user
>> cannot convert grayscale to RGB and thereby make the workflow process
>> amenable to the same controls as color. Several B&W (black ink)  
>> options
>> employ some aspect of this strategy. For instance the MIS/Paul Roark  
>> option
>> is a simple one which, although it requires using a �same as� CMS  
>> profile
>> setting in Photoshop,  also involves a print driver setting of �no  
>> color
>> adjustment� .  This allows the use of RGB curve files applied to the  
>> open
>> image which in a broad sense functions in lieu of a profile selection  
>> in
>> PrintSpace, providing data going to the printer altered to linearize  
>> the
>> application of CcMmY ink position output.
>>
>> Ideally it is technically and theoretically possible to fully utilize  
>> color
>> management and profiles to control B&W printing with black inks. What  
>> is
>> missing for users are two software components. The first is a way to  
>> drive
>> the printer to reproduce a standard grayscale image that would output  
>> a
>> print with a set of recordings resulting from that graysscale  
>> reflecting the
>> ink application performance for each printer ink channel.  Then the  
>> second
>> step would be to �read� the densities from the test chart print. This  
>> can be
>> accomplished with either a flatbed scanner which has the support to  
>> output
>> raw data, or with a photospectrometer. The key piece of need software  
>> would
>> allow inputting the density data read from the chart to be used to  
>> write a
>> profile applying preset algorithms to match ideal aim-points to  
>> control the
>> ink application for each ink color channel.
>>
>> Obviously a user B&W calibration and profiling capability will  
>> require a
>> significant investment in R&D, as well as programming and marketing  
>> to bring
>> these utilities to market. That will happen when the potential market  
>> is
>> adequately recognized in size potential by those in the industry who  
>> have
>> the capability to take the risks to undertake this challenge. From my
>> perspective there are many times more photographers already with a  
>> foot in
>> digital who have an interest in a B&W capability (if it is reasonably  
>> easy
>> and affordable), than there are among those already involved and  
>> using some
>> kind of currently available B&W printing option.
>>
>> Regards, David B. Brooks
>> Shutterbug Magazine
>> E-mail: fotografx@mindspring.com
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 6
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 11:50:35 -0000
>    From: "naturalphoto2001" <emetz45@...>
> Subject: Re: Film Scanners
>
>
> David, thank you so much for your input. This is the kind of
> information I have been looking all over for, as I am on the brink
> of buying the 5400 for B&W negatives. Perhaps you could elaborate a
> little on your workflow (or is it posted on Shutterbug web site?).
> Thanks again ...
>
> Ed Metz
> www.hwy90.com
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B.
> Brooks" <fotografx@m...> wrote:
>> Robert,
>>
>> The extra 1400dpi for one does result in smoother, better
> tonality. And as I
>> mentioned regarding grain, the Minolta minimizes apparent
> graininess very
>> considerably. Most of the problems a lot of people have scanning
> silver
>> based B&W film comes from the fact the ramping algorithms in the
> driver
>> software for B&W film are not well developed � most of the R&D
> by
> scanner
>> companies has been applied to scanning color positives. My
> solution is to
>> scan silver-based black and white as a positive in 48-bit RAW
> files, which I
>> then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a
> negative
>> image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in
> Shutterbug
>> magazine about 3 years ago.
>>
>> I recently did a couple of hundred 17x22 prints testing the Epson
> Pro 4000,
>> and many of them were 35mm images scanned with the Minolta 5400
> with the
>> image size printed set at 15x20 inches. When I did all my printing
> in a wet
>> darkroom I seldom printed 35mm larger than 11x14. Now some of
> those same
>> images look even better, larger, after scanning and printing
> digitally.
>>
>> Regards, David B. Brooks
>> Shutterbug Magazine
>> E-mail: fotografx@m...
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 7
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:58:26 -0000
>    From: "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@gmx.net>
> Subject: Re: Film Scanners
>
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> <fotografx@m...> wrote:
>
>> then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a  
>> negative
>> image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in  
>> Shutterbug
>> magazine about 3 years ago.
>
> Hello David, inverting a positive scan seems to be what many people
> recommend and what I already tried. Probably there is a lot to
> improove in my technique, I looked on the Shutterbug website but did
> not find your article - is it online?
>
> Thanks, bernie
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 8
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 13:06:10 -0000
>    From: "Andre" <am1000@...>
> Subject: Re: Film Scanners
>
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Bernie Ess"
> <albatros-@g...> wrote:
>>
>> improove in my technique, I looked on the Shutterbug website but did
>> not find your article - is it online?
>>
>> Thanks, bernie
>
> Here's what you're looking for:
> http://www.shutterbug.net/features/0902sb_bw/index.html
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 9
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 10:42:04 EDT
>    From: claudej1@...
> Subject: Cheap, easy & dontforgetgood
>
> In a message dated 10/15/2004 10:13:59 PM Pacific Standard Time,
> DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com writes:
>
>> lost my taste for the epson driver along time ago, fourtunately I  
>> only use
>> wide format machines now. People think this is too expensive? buts its
>> really
>> a money saver and easier in so many ways.
>> Steve M.
>>
>
> David and Steve in particular
>
> I too share your frustation/disdain for the subtle variabilities of  
> many the
> "throwaway" plasic printers. On the other hand I'm constantly amazed  
> that they
> can create such technological marvels and sell them so cheap by merely
> chargin $5,000 per gallon of "usable" ink from thos little  
> cartrideges. (packaging,
> packaging, packaging).
>
> My 9500, 7500, 7600, 3000, 5500, 5000, and 4000 have all proven this in
> various forms of color/quad/matte/glossy applications with various
> coatings/lamintations. I have owned or tested just about every  
> significat Epson printer ever
> made since 1994's original Stylus. Guess which ones I'm now seeking,  
> keeping
> and using to earn a living or print family snaps?
>
> Epson's head life rating and CONSITENCY over the life of the heads is  
> triple
> for the Pro DX-3 units vs. the consumer printers. I have always felt  
> that it
> was fundamentally wrong to squirt pigments out of consumer level  
> printheads
> when they were designed for dyes. Paul Roark's recent work with the  
> 2000P bears
> this out when working with simplified monotone inks, since the printer  
> was
> designed for PIGMENTS and cost twice as much as it's dye brethrens.
>
> Wouldn't we think that, in the absence of close-out periods, that a  
> printer
> that costs twice as much would have better mechanics and electronics  
> inside?
> It's my electronics/design/manufacturing background talking, but given  
> a certain
> profit margin dictated by the bean counters that run companies,  
> engineers can
> make a better product with more money to work with. You simply get  
> what you
> pay for.
>
> As a parallel point, was it really that much more money to get a
> vibration-free., motorized 4x5 Beseler enlarger than a plastic cheapie  
> lens wiggler for
> the serious B&W darkroom worker?
>
> Like Paul Roark says, for matte papers, isn't a used 7500 printer that  
> can be
> purchased for about $700 on Ebay cheaper in the long run than goofing  
> around
> with the cheapies with their sloppier manufacturing tolerances?
>
> That being said, the exception might be the R800, but that's color.
>
> Given that Epson "abandons" old models at an alarming pace to keep up  
> with
> Moore's law and market demands, we B&W guys, who are inherently  
> "mavericks" by
> putting experimental foreign inks in older Epsons, benefit from "cheap"
> leftovers. This is borne out when you can buy used Pro level machines  
> on Ebay for 10
> cents on the dollar from just 3 years ago.
>
> On the other topic: "It's easy if you work hard, but hard if you work  
> easy"
> and the "seriousness" of the activity is directly proportional to the  
> dollars
> and time spent.
>
> Claude Jodoin
> Tech. Editor
> Rangefinder
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 10
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:48:13 +0200
>    From: Daniel Staver <daniel@...>
> Subject: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
>
> Just noticed a small bug when printing some pictures with QTR and  
> QTRgui
> yesterday. If I try to print files with any Norwegian charcaters
> (������) in the filenames the files refuse to print.
>
> I don't know whether the problem is with QTR or QTRgui. It's very easy
> to avoid this by renaming the files anyway so it's not a major problem.
>
> --
> Daniel Staver
> http://daniel.staver.no
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 11
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 13:22:19 -0000
>    From: "Richard Voninski" <voninski@...>
> Subject: QTR for Epson 4000 / Windows
>
>
>
> Does anybody have any idea when QTR for the Epson 4000 will become
> available for Windows?  Anybody know if they have a Beta test program
> for a few brave souls?
>
> Thanks in advance!
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 12
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 08:57:26 -0700
>    From: "Stephen Billard" <stephen@...>
> Subject: RE: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
>
> I checked this out. QTRgui passes the correct file name on in its batch
> file. However, when QuadToneRIP displays the name in its log, the name  
> has
> changed. I used the "�" character. It changed into "�". I am not  
> familiar
> enough with extended character sets to speculate why it would change  
> like
> that.
>
> Anyway, needless to say, QuadToneRIP could not open the image since it  
> had
> the wrong name.
>
> -Stephen
>  www.sbillard.org/Stephen
>
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Daniel Staver [mailto:daniel@petraflux.com]
>> Sent: Saturday, October 16, 2004 7:48 AM
>> To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
>> Subject: [Digital BW] QTR or QTRgui doesn't like
>> international characters
>>
>>
>>
>> Just noticed a small bug when printing some pictures with QTR
>> and QTRgui yesterday. If I try to print files with any
>> Norwegian charcaters
>> (������) in the filenames the files refuse to print.
>>
>> I don't know whether the problem is with QTR or QTRgui. It's
>> very easy
>> to avoid this by renaming the files anyway so it's not a
>> major problem.
>>
>> --
>> Daniel Staver
>> http://daniel.staver.no
>>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 13
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:00:39 -0000
>    From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@...>
> Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
>
>
> One more quick comment, I was also able to test ColorVision�s new
> Spyder2Pro colorimeter and software, and was very impressed. I've used
> and tested a few different hardware calibration apps/devices, and this
> seems very good.
> Also, I just wanted to add that it's nice to you posting on this list,
> David. Hope I haven't chased you off.
> Tyler
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> <fotografx@m...> wrote:
>>
>> Bernie,
>>
>> May I suggest that �color management� and monitor calibration and
> profiling
>> could at least reduce the discrepancy between what you see on-screen  
>> and
>> what you obtain in a print even though you are working with
> grayscale and
>> not color.  I have jumped in here in part because I was just delivered
>> ColorVision�s new Spyder2Pro colorimeter and software, and the  
>> resulting
>> calibration and profiling I am now obtaining is amazingly
> well-matched and
>> the screen gray is at a neutral balance I�ve not seen before. And
> may I also
>> suggest that with an LCD flat panel, its grater brightness range
> compared to
>> a CRT, makes it that much more difficult to obtain screen matching
> in prints
>> as there is an inherent gamma discrepancy. CRT�s are much closer in
>> brightness range and apparent gamma effect to a print density range.
>>
>> Regards, David B. Brooks
>> Shutterbug Magazine
>> E-mail: fotografx@m...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 10/15/04 4:17 AM, "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@...> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> When I started b&w printing on an Epson, I thought one of the
>>> advantages over the darkroom was that once its well set up, there
>>> would be no trying and experimenting and that I would have 100%
>>> predictable results.
>>>
>>> Now, a few hundreds or probably thousands of prints later I find that
>>> this is
>>> not exactly the case. On my 2100/UT7 workflow I find the following
>>> issues:
>>>
>>> 1. My output from the file + Roark curves is roughly, but never
>>> exactly what I see on my monitor. When I look at the grayscale on my
>>> flat panel the 100% to 0%
>>> steps are quite well separated, but in the uncorrected print the deep
>>> shadows (around 95%
>>> black) are not well resolved, 95% comes out totally
>>> black: So I had to make a curve that boosts the deep shadows.
>>>
>>> 2. I often find myself having to do several prints of the same photo,
>>> because the general "look" of the print is not like on the screen,  
>>> see
>>> also my other message about the foliage and trees.
>>>
>>> 3. The most mysterious thing is that my output seems to vary from  
>>> time
>>> to time. Sometimes I find the prints too dark compared to the screen,
>>> sometimes they are slightly too light.
>>>
>>> Finally its not that different from the darkroom, I would say
>>> gradually more predictable (maybe even by a large margin, but that is
>>> probably because my traditional darkroom skills are so poor).
>>>
>>> So, do you have a 100% WYSIWYG workflow?
>>>
>>> Thanks for your input,
>>>
>>> Bernhard
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other
> resources as
>>> they are often being updated.
>>>
>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
>>>
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>>> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting
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>>> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the
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>>> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be
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>>
>>
>>
>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
> Message: 14
>    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:49:22 -0000
>    From: "ferdinand_paris" <ferdinand_paris@...>
> Subject: QTRGui not retaining page sizes
>
>
> Stephen
>
> I've noticed that in the current version of QTRGui, all the settings
> from the last session are saved, except page size, which is always
> reset to the size at the top of the list - Letter.  I print on A4 or
> A3.  Not a major issue, provided I remember to reset it each time I
> open QTRGui.  I thought an earlier version retained this setting, but
> perhaps I am wrong (getting old and the memory is going - it's why I
> need a camera).
>
> F_P
>
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
> _______________________________________________________________________ 
> _
>
>
> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other  
> resources as they are often being updated.
>
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
>
> If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you wish  
> to unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting  
> this same page.
>
> Please follow these basic guidelines:
> - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages to  
> keep them short.
> - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or  
> flames. Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from  
> the membership without notice.
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-18 by John Vitollo

Jerry Hadam  wrote:
 > The point I am at right now is that I have downloaded the soft  
> proofing profiles from Roy's and now I can't find the page that details  
> installation of these items.

Hi Jerry,

First trim your posts. You sent the whole digest to list.

After downloading, put the .psf profiles in the appropriate folder (/Library/Application 
Support/Adobe/Color/Proofing on a Mac running OS X).

Best,

John V.

Re: Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-18 by Roy Harrington

Hi Jerry,

The proofing files (i.e. .psf files) all go into:
yourhome/Library/Application Support/Adobe/Color/Proofing/
There's an install file that copies them into the right place.

I haven't tried bluetooth and I'm not sure how you set up a
printer for bluetooth.  I've done wireless printing just using shared
printing -- that's simple just set "share printers" on the machine with
the printer.   Using the USB port on the airport is probably another
possibility but I haven't used that either.

Roy


--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Jerry Hadam <jerry@p...> 
wrote:
> Hello all,
> I am finally getting around to trying to install QTR. I went all  
> through Roy's site and the Outbackphoto tutorial that they had on their  
> site. The point I am at right now is that I have downloaded the soft  
> proofing profiles from Roy's and now I can't find the page that details  
> installation of these items.
> 
> I am running OSX Panther with Photoshop CS, and Epson 2200 with  
> standard inkset (my folder for soft proof reads 2200 QTR UC) on a Mac  
> G4 running a 1.5 ghz G4 processor and 1Gb of ram.
> 
> The files in the folder look like plugins but read proof on them. Where  
> do these go?
> 
> Also I am trying to use the bluetooth or my built-in airport stuff to  
> wirelessly print to this printer I guess I need a bluetooth print  
> server or an Airport extreme print server- anyone have any experience  
> with this? (reply personally if you think it is too OT for the list).
> 
> Thanks very much,
> Jerry
> 
> Jerry Hadam
> jerry@p...
> 208-726-2942
> 888-540-8053
> 
> In Saddletree Cutsom Framing
> Crazy Horse Square-Ketchum
> 
> Box 2749
> Ketchum, ID 83340
> 
> 
> On Oct 16, 2004, at 11:06 AM,  
> DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com wrote:
> 
> >
> >
> > There are 14 messages in this issue.
> >
> > Topics in this digest:
> >
> >       1. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >            From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@m...>
> >       2. Re: Film Scanners
> >            From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@m...>
> >       3. StudioPrint, mono color management etc. was How reliable
> >            From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@t...>
> >       4. Re: Re: QTR profiles for 2200 PC users
> >            From: Hans Van Rafelghem <hvr@a...>
> >       5. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >            From: Steve Kale <stevekale@b...>
> >       6. Re: Film Scanners
> >            From: "naturalphoto2001" <emetz45@h...>
> >       7. Re: Film Scanners
> >            From: "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@...>
> >       8. Re: Film Scanners
> >            From: "Andre" <am1000@v...>
> >       9. Cheap, easy & dontforgetgood
> >            From: claudej1@a...
> >      10. QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
> >            From: Daniel Staver <daniel@p...>
> >      11. QTR for Epson 4000 / Windows
> >            From: "Richard Voninski" <voninski@h...>
> >      12. RE: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
> >            From: "Stephen Billard" <stephen@s...>
> >      13. Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >            From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@t...>
> >      14. QTRGui not retaining page sizes
> >            From: "ferdinand_paris" <ferdinand_paris@y...>
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 1
> >    Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 22:36:02 -0700
> >    From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@m...>
> > Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >
> > Steve M.,
> >
> > I get the picture of where you are coming from, and I have no reason to
> > dispute your perspective. However, I know there are a lot of serious
> > photographers out there (I get piles of e-mail from them) who are  
> > interested
> > and would become involved but need to see a flat boulevard instead of a
> > narrow, steep path in front of them. I think B&W printing today is  
> > analogous
> > to being into computers in the mid 80¹s working from a command line,  
> > and it
> > will take the equivalent of a GUI to get them to dive in.
> >
> > Why do I care, simply because of the advantage of numbers. I realize I  
> > would
> > not have had much of the pro equipment I have worked with over the  
> > years if
> > it weren¹t for all of the enthusiast doctors and lawyers buying 10,  
> > 20, 30,
> > a 100 times as much product as we pro¹s used.  Unless the enthusiasts  
> > are
> > into this in the numbers that are possible the market size will limit
> > development and keep costs higher than they would be otherwise, and a  
> > lot of
> > neat innovative stuff will never get developed.
> >
> > Regards, David B. Brooks
> > Shutterbug Magazine
> > E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > On 10/15/04 8:00 PM, "sdmey4@a..." <sdmey4@a...> wrote:
> >
> >> David, I agree with all 3 of your paragraphs 100% ;0  I can only add
> >> ' affordable, and easy" are pretty subjective. Many ways to skin a  
> >> cat so to
> >> speak, and I have tried them all from the cheapest to most expensive.  
> >> If easy
> >> means using someone else's rgb curves on YOUR printer and monitior  
> >> than its no
> >> wonder there are inconsistencies all over. I'm a big fan of easy and
> >> consistancy, so my point is, you have to do it yourself. Printing out  
> >> patches
> >> and
> >> measuring with the eyeone is a breeze, no fuss no muss, just plain  
> >> and simple
> >> linerized greyscale. What a great place to start.
> >> For users who don't have a handle on color management or the  
> >> knowledge to
> >> write there own perfect RGB curves for conversion, what could be  
> >> easier? Those
> >> expensive options pay for themselves rather quickly.
> >> I lost my taste for the epson driver along time ago, fourtunately I  
> >> only use
> >> wide format machines now. People think this is too expensive? buts  
> >> its really
> >> a money saver and easier in so many ways.
> >> Steve M.
> >>
> >> In a message dated 10/15/2004 7:31:30 PM Pacific Daylight Time,
> >> fotografx@m... writes:
> >>
> >>>> Steve,
> >>>>
> >>>> I agree with your first sentence without reservation. However  
> >>>> printing
> >>> black
> >>>> &white is not limited to a ³same as² workflow. There is no reason a  
> >>>> user
> >>>> cannot convert grayscale to RGB and thereby make the workflow  
> >>>> process
> >>>> amenable to the same controls as color. Several B&W (black ink)  
> >>>> options
> >>>> employ some aspect of this strategy. For instance the MIS/Paul  
> >>>> Roark option
> >>>> is a simple one which, although it requires using a ³same as² CMS  
> >>>> profile
> >>>> setting in Photoshop,  also involves a print driver setting of ³no  
> >>>> color
> >>>> adjustment² .  This allows the use of RGB curve files applied to  
> >>>> the open
> >>>> image which in a broad sense functions in lieu of a profile  
> >>>> selection in
> >>>> PrintSpace, providing data going to the printer altered to  
> >>>> linearize the
> >>>> application of CcMmY ink position output.
> >>>> Snip >>>>>>
> >>>>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other  
> >> resources as
> >> they are often being updated.
> >>
> >> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
> >>
> >> If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you wish  
> >> to
> >> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting this  
> >> same
> >> page.
> >>
> >> Please follow these basic guidelines:
> >> - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages to  
> >> keep
> >> them short.
> >> - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or  
> >> flames.
> >> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the  
> >> membership
> >> without notice.
> >> - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of digital  
> >> B&W
> >> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be removed  
> >> from the
> >> membership.
> >> - By posting on this forum you agree to abide by the group rules and
> >> guidelines, and to abide by the actions and decisions of the group  
> >> Owner and
> >> Moderators. See ?Group Topic, Rules and Guidelines? in the Files  
> >> section:
> >> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint/files/
> >>
> >> BY PARTICIPATING IN AND/OR POSTING MESSAGES TO THE DIGITAL BW, THE  
> >> PRINT
> >> YAHOO! GROUP YOU EXPRESSLY UNDERSTAND AND AGREE THAT THE ?OWNER? 
AND
> >> ?MODERATORS? OF DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP SHALL NOT BE LIABLE  
> >> TO YOU
> >> FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR  
> >> EXEMPLARY
> >> DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS,  
> >> GOODWILL,
> >> USE, DATA OR OTHER INTANGIBLE LOSSES (EVEN IF THE  ?OWNER? AND  
> >> ?MODERATORS? OF
> >> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE  
> >> POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
> >> DAMAGES), RESULTING FROM: (i) THE USE OR THE INABILITY TO USE THE  
> >> DIGITAL BW,
> >> THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP; (ii) UNAUTHORIZED ACCESS TO OR ALTERATION OF  
> >> YOUR
> >> TRANSMISSIONS OR DATA; (iii) STATEMENTS OR CONDUCT OF ANY THIRD PARTY  
> >> ON THE
> >> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP; OR (iv) ANY OTHER MATTER RELATING  
> >> TO THE
> >> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP.
> >>
> >>
> >>
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*https: 
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> >> hardbank.com/hcs/hcsapplication?pf=PLApply&media=EMYHNL40F21004SS>
> >>
> >>
> >> Yahoo! Groups Links
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> >> *
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> >
> >
> >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 2
> >    Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 22:50:53 -0700
> >    From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@m...>
> > Subject: Re: Film Scanners
> >
> > Robert,
> >
> > The extra 1400dpi for one does result in smoother, better tonality.  
> > And as I
> > mentioned regarding grain, the Minolta minimizes apparent graininess  
> > very
> > considerably. Most of the problems a lot of people have scanning silver
> > based B&W film comes from the fact the ramping algorithms in the driver
> > software for B&W film are not well developed ­ most of the R&D by  
> > scanner
> > companies has been applied to scanning color positives. My solution is  
> > to
> > scan silver-based black and white as a positive in 48-bit RAW files,  
> > which I
> > then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a  
> > negative
> > image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in  
> > Shutterbug
> > magazine about 3 years ago.
> >
> > I recently did a couple of hundred 17x22 prints testing the Epson Pro  
> > 4000,
> > and many of them were 35mm images scanned with the Minolta 5400 with  
> > the
> > image size printed set at 15x20 inches. When I did all my printing in  
> > a wet
> > darkroom I seldom printed 35mm larger than 11x14. Now some of those  
> > same
> > images look even better, larger, after scanning and printing digitally.
> >
> > Regards, David B. Brooks
> > Shutterbug Magazine
> > E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > On 10/15/04 10:12 PM, "Robert" <la_native@h...> wrote:
> >
> >>
> >> David, thank you for your informative comments.  Given you positive
> >> feelings about the Minolta, is there a noticeable difference compared
> >> to the older Canon fs4000?  Yes, there's an additional 1,400dpi
> >> resolution, but does that provide for better tonality?
> >>
> >> With my Canon, the best film for scanning is the b&w chromogenics (TCN
> >> and Xp-2).  Tri-x and most silver-based films don't look so great --
> >> the grain tends to block up and mess with the tone transitions.
> >>
> >> -Robert Ades
> >>
> >> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> >> <fotografx@m...> wrote:
> >>>> Robert,
> >>>>
> >>>> Shortly after its announcement I had the opportunity to test and
> >> report on
> >>>> the Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400, which appeared in Shutterbug
> >> magazine
> >>>> some issues back. I also tested and reported on the Canon 4000FS
> >> some months
> >>>> before. I have not reviewed a Nikon scanner for some time, not  
> >>>> because I
> >>>> have any issue with the scanner itself as it is very fine hardware,  
> >>>> but
> >>>> because the software is the worst in its class and the scanner is on
> >> that
> >>>> basis grossly over-priced.
> >>>>
> >>>> The one outstanding feature, especially applied to scanning B&W
> >> silver-based
> >>>> film is the 5400dpi optical resolution. That is a distinct  
> >>>> advantage not
> >>>> just because it will natively support making 16x24 inch by 300dpi
> >> scans, but
> >>>> the high resolution avoids a pattern interference problem with film
> >> grain,
> >>>> particularly with grainier film processed with acutance developers  
> >>>> (low
> >>>> sodium sulfite formula¹s) like Acufine and particularly Rodinal. In
> >>>> addition, the Minolta has a Grain Dissolver feature which is
> >> actually a very
> >>>> fine diffusion filter, which combined with the scanners tube light
> >> source
> >>>> that also reduces apparent graininess and avoids highlight blocking,
> >> which
> >>>> can occur with some 35mm dedicated scanners with a more collimated  
> >>>> light
> >>>> source (like the difference printing with a diffusion versus and
> >> condenser
> >>>> enlarger).
> >>>>
> >>>> If it makes any difference, being an old f... With 3/4 of my film
> >> library in
> >>>> B&W, my reaction after testing the Minolta was to ask for invoice
> >> sending
> >>>> Minolta a check instead of returning the scanner.
> >>>>
> >>>> Regards, David B. Brooks
> >>>> Shutterbug Magazine
> >>>> E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> On 10/15/04 8:07 PM, "Robert" <la_native@h...> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I'm having the darnest time getting a comprehensive comparison of  
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>> Nikon LS5000 and the Minolta 5400 compared to my Canon FS4000.  I  
> >>>>>> know
> >>>>>> the newer scanners have lots of new features, faster scanning,  
> >>>>>> better
> >>>>>> bit depth, ICE x 4, etc.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> What I want to know is, do either of these scanners work better  
> >>>>>> with
> >>>>>> B&W negatives, OR pull better shadow detail with slides, than the
> >> Canon.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I already have the Canon and can live with its limitations.  But  
> >>>>>> I'd
> >>>>>> consider upgrading if the image quality were noticeably better.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> All comments w/b appreciated!  Thanks!
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Robert Ades
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other
> >> resources as
> >>>>>> they are often being updated.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint
> >>>>>>
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> >> wish to
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> >>>>
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> >>>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other  
> >> resources as
> >> they are often being updated.
> >>
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> >>
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> >> to
> >> unsubscribe, please edit your Membership preferences by visiting this  
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> >>
> >> Please follow these basic guidelines:
> >> - As threads develop, trim off excess portions of earlier messages to  
> >> keep
> >> them short.
> >> - Good manners are required at all time. No personal attacks or  
> >> flames.
> >> Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the  
> >> membership
> >> without notice.
> >> - Keep your posts and threads related to the group topic of digital  
> >> B&W
> >> printing. Users who persistently make off-topic posts may be removed  
> >> from the
> >> membership.
> >> - By posting on this forum you agree to abide by the group rules and
> >> guidelines, and to abide by the actions and decisions of the group  
> >> Owner and
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> >> section:
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> >>
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AND
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> >> FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR  
> >> EXEMPLARY
> >> DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS,  
> >> GOODWILL,
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> >> "MODERATORS" OF
> >> DIGITAL BW, THE PRINT YAHOO GROUP HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE  
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> >> DIGITAL BW,
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> >> YOUR
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> >> ON THE
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> >>
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> >
> >
> >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 3
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 06:02:38 -0000
> >    From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@t...>
> > Subject: StudioPrint, mono color management etc. was How reliable
> >
> >
> > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> > <fotografx@m...> wrote:
> >> Steve M.,
> >>
> >> Not according to the documentation that is published in the Ergosoft  
> >> web
> >> site.  They state specifically that it is not ICC compliant. As far
> > as I can
> >> establish all of the available, commercial RIPS for black and white
> > printing
> >> are intentionally proprietary, except of course for the Linux GIMP  
> >> based
> >> solution. From my perspective it is a technical solution dictated by a
> >> business model. That model essentially assumes a delimited market
> > potential,
> >> in part reflected by the printers supported, and which offers
> > limited user
> >> control or independence. It¹s the Polaroid philosophy now perpetuated  
> >> as
> >> much as they can by Epson.
> >
> > This requires some clarification, which might effect some of your
> > views. What StudioPrint does for quads is really just an extremely
> > well executed expansion of features expected in any good RIP. All
> > these drivers, even the OEM ones, have the ability to partition. They
> > do it from light cyan to cyan, light magenta to magenta, and with the
> > UC printers light K to K as well. The good RIPs offer more user
> > control, not less, by giving the user options in controling those
> > partitions and other controls as well. All good RIPs offer the user
> > the ability to linearize each channel, including those made up of a
> > light and dark component. This is simply density tuning of the driver
> > per channel, not in the icc data path, also a user control not part of
> > OEM drivers. ICC profiling is done AFTER the RIP is tuned in this
> > manner for the particular printer, inkset, and paper being used.
> > All StudioPrint did was add a user selectable monochrome mode, and add
> > two more (for now) partitions, a very light black and a very very
> > light black. And of course like any good RIP, this channel is also
> > hardware linearizable. This has little to do with any color management
> > yet. It can be compared to the K only mode in the Epson driver, but
> > with that K channel partitionable into multiple inks. As you know,
> > when you select K only in the Epson driver, color management in the
> > driver is disabled, only gamma adjustments are offered. This makes
> > sense as the entire data path is single channel.
> > So actually, all that has been done is an expansion of features
> > already expected in good RIPs, perhaps what is proprietory is how well
> > it has been implemented.
> > In fact, the whole system is so user adjustable, it can be made to
> > work with practically any inkset on any supported printer. You could
> > even, in CMYK mode, used a 4 part quad inkset for K, and still have C,
> > M, and Y, inks for toning in a 7 ink printer, or the same with a 3
> > part K in a 6 ink printer. All kinds of things are possible, and all
> > icc compatable in multichannel modes. It couldn't be more open.
> > These are not confinements dictated by a business model, we expect
> > these features from all good RIPs. The one that is a bit of a black
> > box with little user control, and a lot of secret "magic", is
> > ImagePrint, but it's users are quite happy and not complaining, and
> > even it is fully icc compliant.
> >
> >> I am not being critical in terms of what it does, or for that matter
> > what
> >> several other competitors also do. What I am suggesting is that it
> > does not
> >> parallel for instance what color management companies do like Monaco,
> >> Gretag-Macbeth or ColorVision, which is base their solutions on a
> > standard
> >> which interfaces seamlessly with  OS based CMS¹s¹ supporting full user
> >> independence after purchasing the software/hardware.
> >
> > Actually David, these companies are what are standing in our way of
> > placing color management in our single channel monochromatic data
> > path. They offer no way of building single channel luminosity only
> > profiling. Single channel icc compliant profiles are possible, but not
> > yet a feature of these apps. I have one obscure app that will make
> > them, but the printed percentage curves have to be entered by hand,
> > not measured in. It will also make what it calls a rich black profile
> > from measured color profiles, paper white, K point, the whole deal,
> > but this is not what we need.
> > As soon as one of these profiling apps allows us to build single
> > channel icc profiles made with our measurement devices, we can profile
> > any grayscale output device/driver/inkset/paper/etc., and if outputing
> > from photoshop, select it as our printer profile and be on our way. If
> > printing to a RIP, not out of an app, we'd simply have to convert and
> > save before printing, if the RIP or driver is in a currentaly non-icc
> > compliant single channel mode, as most of these special monochrome
> > drivers are, or SP in quad mode.
> > I hope all that makes sense, and if I have misunderstood and gone off
> > on a tangent, please accept my apology in advance.
> > Tyler
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 4
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 10:08:54 +0200
> >    From: Hans Van Rafelghem <hvr@a...>
> > Subject: Re: Re: QTR profiles for 2200 PC users
> >
> >
> >> It should be possible to see if the profiles are actually the same
> >> file with different names by using a file compare routine.  Any chance
> >> of getting a copy of the profile from Roy? I wonder why they weren't
> >> released.  I find the semi-gloss profiles a bit warm, and am yet to
> >> see if I can cool them down enough.
> >>
> > Yes they are a bit on the brown side.
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> The Permajet thing is remarkable.  I tried your suggestion to use this
> >> profile for colour in Ilford smooth pearl, and agree that it removes
> >> almost all the green cast.  But what is your story this time about how
> >> you stumbled across its suitability for B&W?  Are you trying all the
> >> new PC profiles for QTR with all the paper combinations, or was it
> >> serendipity again?
> >>
> >>
> > No, actually it was Carl who adviced to do so :-) .
> >
> >> I will try the Permajet profile.  What mixture of cool and warm
> >> settings are you using?
> >>
> >>
> >>
> > 50% cool - 50% warm
> >
> >> Thanks.
> >>
> >> F_P
> >>
> >>
> >>
> > -- 
> >
> > Hans Van Rafelghem
> > http://www.vanrafelghem.com
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 5
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:16:59 +0100
> >    From: Steve Kale <stevekale@b...>
> > Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >
> > I am sure that the next stage of B&W printing will be to allow a colour
> > managed workflow that includes accurate control over the inks but I  
> > suspect
> > this is not an easy exercise (otherwise I am sure it would be much more
> > prevalent today) and will likely take some time.  The solutions that  
> > exist
> > along these lines today are expensive and inflexible (they don't  
> > transport
> > to new inks for example).  I have not used Paul's workflow but I  
> > understand
> > it involves the application of curves to an RGB file to alter the  
> > colour
> > composition of the file in order to manipulate the inks via a colour  
> > driver.
> > Hardly a what you see is what you get workflow.  My point was that  
> > there
> > exists today an easy way to get quite a good softproof from any B&W
> > workflow.  It is available to anyone with an Eye-One Photo.  I have  
> > found
> > that this has taken a lot of the trial and error out of my B&W  
> > workflow.  I
> > can simply work on an image and then soft proof for the paper I intend  
> > to
> > use and then apply an adjustment curve so that it then matches my  
> > original
> > file.  Easy. No more too light/too dark vs screen. Now obviously if my
> > display were not correctly calibrated and I have not built soft proof  
> > files
> > (with Carl's workflow) for my B&W printer output then I would again be
> > shooting in the dark.
> >
> >
> >> From: "David B. Brooks" <fotografx@m...>
> >> Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> >> Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2004 19:29:37 -0700
> >> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> >> Cc: <stevekale@b...>
> >> Subject: Re: [Digital BW] How reliable/ precise is your b&w print  
> >> workflow?
> >>
> >>
> >> Steve,
> >>
> >> I agree with your first sentence without reservation. However  
> >> printing black
> >> & white is not limited to a ³same as² workflow. There is no reason a  
> >> user
> >> cannot convert grayscale to RGB and thereby make the workflow process
> >> amenable to the same controls as color. Several B&W (black ink)  
> >> options
> >> employ some aspect of this strategy. For instance the MIS/Paul Roark  
> >> option
> >> is a simple one which, although it requires using a ³same as² CMS  
> >> profile
> >> setting in Photoshop,  also involves a print driver setting of ³no  
> >> color
> >> adjustment² .  This allows the use of RGB curve files applied to the  
> >> open
> >> image which in a broad sense functions in lieu of a profile selection  
> >> in
> >> PrintSpace, providing data going to the printer altered to linearize  
> >> the
> >> application of CcMmY ink position output.
> >>
> >> Ideally it is technically and theoretically possible to fully utilize  
> >> color
> >> management and profiles to control B&W printing with black inks. What  
> >> is
> >> missing for users are two software components. The first is a way to  
> >> drive
> >> the printer to reproduce a standard grayscale image that would output  
> >> a
> >> print with a set of recordings resulting from that graysscale  
> >> reflecting the
> >> ink application performance for each printer ink channel.  Then the  
> >> second
> >> step would be to ³read² the densities from the test chart print. This  
> >> can be
> >> accomplished with either a flatbed scanner which has the support to  
> >> output
> >> raw data, or with a photospectrometer. The key piece of need software  
> >> would
> >> allow inputting the density data read from the chart to be used to  
> >> write a
> >> profile applying preset algorithms to match ideal aim-points to  
> >> control the
> >> ink application for each ink color channel.
> >>
> >> Obviously a user B&W calibration and profiling capability will  
> >> require a
> >> significant investment in R&D, as well as programming and marketing  
> >> to bring
> >> these utilities to market. That will happen when the potential market  
> >> is
> >> adequately recognized in size potential by those in the industry who  
> >> have
> >> the capability to take the risks to undertake this challenge. From my
> >> perspective there are many times more photographers already with a  
> >> foot in
> >> digital who have an interest in a B&W capability (if it is reasonably  
> >> easy
> >> and affordable), than there are among those already involved and  
> >> using some
> >> kind of currently available B&W printing option.
> >>
> >> Regards, David B. Brooks
> >> Shutterbug Magazine
> >> E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 6
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 11:50:35 -0000
> >    From: "naturalphoto2001" <emetz45@h...>
> > Subject: Re: Film Scanners
> >
> >
> > David, thank you so much for your input. This is the kind of
> > information I have been looking all over for, as I am on the brink
> > of buying the 5400 for B&W negatives. Perhaps you could elaborate a
> > little on your workflow (or is it posted on Shutterbug web site?).
> > Thanks again ...
> >
> > Ed Metz
> > www.hwy90.com
> >
> > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B.
> > Brooks" <fotografx@m...> wrote:
> >> Robert,
> >>
> >> The extra 1400dpi for one does result in smoother, better
> > tonality. And as I
> >> mentioned regarding grain, the Minolta minimizes apparent
> > graininess very
> >> considerably. Most of the problems a lot of people have scanning
> > silver
> >> based B&W film comes from the fact the ramping algorithms in the
> > driver
> >> software for B&W film are not well developed ­ most of the R&D
> > by
> > scanner
> >> companies has been applied to scanning color positives. My
> > solution is to
> >> scan silver-based black and white as a positive in 48-bit RAW
> > files, which I
> >> then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a
> > negative
> >> image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in
> > Shutterbug
> >> magazine about 3 years ago.
> >>
> >> I recently did a couple of hundred 17x22 prints testing the Epson
> > Pro 4000,
> >> and many of them were 35mm images scanned with the Minolta 5400
> > with the
> >> image size printed set at 15x20 inches. When I did all my printing
> > in a wet
> >> darkroom I seldom printed 35mm larger than 11x14. Now some of
> > those same
> >> images look even better, larger, after scanning and printing
> > digitally.
> >>
> >> Regards, David B. Brooks
> >> Shutterbug Magazine
> >> E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 7
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 12:58:26 -0000
> >    From: "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@...>
> > Subject: Re: Film Scanners
> >
> >
> > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> > <fotografx@m...> wrote:
> >
> >> then correct in several steps before and after inverting from a  
> >> negative
> >> image to a positive. This technique I wrote up as a how-to in  
> >> Shutterbug
> >> magazine about 3 years ago.
> >
> > Hello David, inverting a positive scan seems to be what many people
> > recommend and what I already tried. Probably there is a lot to
> > improove in my technique, I looked on the Shutterbug website but did
> > not find your article - is it online?
> >
> > Thanks, bernie
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 8
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 13:06:10 -0000
> >    From: "Andre" <am1000@v...>
> > Subject: Re: Film Scanners
> >
> >
> > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Bernie Ess"
> > <albatros-@g...> wrote:
> >>
> >> improove in my technique, I looked on the Shutterbug website but did
> >> not find your article - is it online?
> >>
> >> Thanks, bernie
> >
> > Here's what you're looking for:
> > http://www.shutterbug.net/features/0902sb_bw/index.html
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 9
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 10:42:04 EDT
> >    From: claudej1@a...
> > Subject: Cheap, easy & dontforgetgood
> >
> > In a message dated 10/15/2004 10:13:59 PM Pacific Standard Time,
> > DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com writes:
> >
> >> lost my taste for the epson driver along time ago, fourtunately I  
> >> only use
> >> wide format machines now. People think this is too expensive? buts its
> >> really
> >> a money saver and easier in so many ways.
> >> Steve M.
> >>
> >
> > David and Steve in particular
> >
> > I too share your frustation/disdain for the subtle variabilities of  
> > many the
> > "throwaway" plasic printers. On the other hand I'm constantly amazed  
> > that they
> > can create such technological marvels and sell them so cheap by merely
> > chargin $5,000 per gallon of "usable" ink from thos little  
> > cartrideges. (packaging,
> > packaging, packaging).
> >
> > My 9500, 7500, 7600, 3000, 5500, 5000, and 4000 have all proven this in
> > various forms of color/quad/matte/glossy applications with various
> > coatings/lamintations. I have owned or tested just about every  
> > significat Epson printer ever
> > made since 1994's original Stylus. Guess which ones I'm now seeking,  
> > keeping
> > and using to earn a living or print family snaps?
> >
> > Epson's head life rating and CONSITENCY over the life of the heads is  
> > triple
> > for the Pro DX-3 units vs. the consumer printers. I have always felt  
> > that it
> > was fundamentally wrong to squirt pigments out of consumer level  
> > printheads
> > when they were designed for dyes. Paul Roark's recent work with the  
> > 2000P bears
> > this out when working with simplified monotone inks, since the printer  
> > was
> > designed for PIGMENTS and cost twice as much as it's dye brethrens.
> >
> > Wouldn't we think that, in the absence of close-out periods, that a  
> > printer
> > that costs twice as much would have better mechanics and electronics  
> > inside?
> > It's my electronics/design/manufacturing background talking, but given  
> > a certain
> > profit margin dictated by the bean counters that run companies,  
> > engineers can
> > make a better product with more money to work with. You simply get  
> > what you
> > pay for.
> >
> > As a parallel point, was it really that much more money to get a
> > vibration-free., motorized 4x5 Beseler enlarger than a plastic cheapie  
> > lens wiggler for
> > the serious B&W darkroom worker?
> >
> > Like Paul Roark says, for matte papers, isn't a used 7500 printer that  
> > can be
> > purchased for about $700 on Ebay cheaper in the long run than goofing  
> > around
> > with the cheapies with their sloppier manufacturing tolerances?
> >
> > That being said, the exception might be the R800, but that's color.
> >
> > Given that Epson "abandons" old models at an alarming pace to keep up  
> > with
> > Moore's law and market demands, we B&W guys, who are inherently  
> > "mavericks" by
> > putting experimental foreign inks in older Epsons, benefit from "cheap"
> > leftovers. This is borne out when you can buy used Pro level machines  
> > on Ebay for 10
> > cents on the dollar from just 3 years ago.
> >
> > On the other topic: "It's easy if you work hard, but hard if you work  
> > easy"
> > and the "seriousness" of the activity is directly proportional to the  
> > dollars
> > and time spent.
> >
> > Claude Jodoin
> > Tech. Editor
> > Rangefinder
> >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 10
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:48:13 +0200
> >    From: Daniel Staver <daniel@p...>
> > Subject: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
> >
> > Just noticed a small bug when printing some pictures with QTR and  
> > QTRgui
> > yesterday. If I try to print files with any Norwegian charcaters
> > (æøåÆØÅ) in the filenames the files refuse to print.
> >
> > I don't know whether the problem is with QTR or QTRgui. It's very easy
> > to avoid this by renaming the files anyway so it's not a major problem.
> >
> > --
> > Daniel Staver
> > http://daniel.staver.no
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 11
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 13:22:19 -0000
> >    From: "Richard Voninski" <voninski@h...>
> > Subject: QTR for Epson 4000 / Windows
> >
> >
> >
> > Does anybody have any idea when QTR for the Epson 4000 will become
> > available for Windows?  Anybody know if they have a Beta test program
> > for a few brave souls?
> >
> > Thanks in advance!
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 12
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 08:57:26 -0700
> >    From: "Stephen Billard" <stephen@s...>
> > Subject: RE: QTR or QTRgui doesn't like international characters
> >
> > I checked this out. QTRgui passes the correct file name on in its batch
> > file. However, when QuadToneRIP displays the name in its log, the name  
> > has
> > changed. I used the "æ" character. It changed into "µ". I am not  
> > familiar
> > enough with extended character sets to speculate why it would change  
> > like
> > that.
> >
> > Anyway, needless to say, QuadToneRIP could not open the image since it  
> > had
> > the wrong name.
> >
> > -Stephen
> >  www.sbillard.org/Stephen
> >
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: Daniel Staver [mailto:daniel@p...]
> >> Sent: Saturday, October 16, 2004 7:48 AM
> >> To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
> >> Subject: [Digital BW] QTR or QTRgui doesn't like
> >> international characters
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Just noticed a small bug when printing some pictures with QTR
> >> and QTRgui yesterday. If I try to print files with any
> >> Norwegian charcaters
> >> (æøåÆØÅ) in the filenames the files refuse to print.
> >>
> >> I don't know whether the problem is with QTR or QTRgui. It's
> >> very easy
> >> to avoid this by renaming the files anyway so it's not a
> >> major problem.
> >>
> >> --
> >> Daniel Staver
> >> http://daniel.staver.no
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> > _______________________________________________________________________ 
> > _
> >
> > Message: 13
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:00:39 -0000
> >    From: "Tyler Boley" <tyler@t...>
> > Subject: Re: How reliable/ precise is your b&w print workflow?
> >
> >
> > One more quick comment, I was also able to test ColorVision¹s new
> > Spyder2Pro colorimeter and software, and was very impressed. I've used
> > and tested a few different hardware calibration apps/devices, and this
> > seems very good.
> > Also, I just wanted to add that it's nice to you posting on this list,
> > David. Hope I haven't chased you off.
> > Tyler
> >
> > --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David B. Brooks"
> > <fotografx@m...> wrote:
> >>
> >> Bernie,
> >>
> >> May I suggest that ³color management² and monitor calibration and
> > profiling
> >> could at least reduce the discrepancy between what you see on-screen  
> >> and
> >> what you obtain in a print even though you are working with
> > grayscale and
> >> not color.  I have jumped in here in part because I was just delivered
> >> ColorVision¹s new Spyder2Pro colorimeter and software, and the  
> >> resulting
> >> calibration and profiling I am now obtaining is amazingly
> > well-matched and
> >> the screen gray is at a neutral balance I¹ve not seen before. And
> > may I also
> >> suggest that with an LCD flat panel, its grater brightness range
> > compared to
> >> a CRT, makes it that much more difficult to obtain screen matching
> > in prints
> >> as there is an inherent gamma discrepancy. CRT¹s are much closer in
> >> brightness range and apparent gamma effect to a print density range.
> >>
> >> Regards, David B. Brooks
> >> Shutterbug Magazine
> >> E-mail: fotografx@m...
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> On 10/15/04 4:17 AM, "Bernie Ess" <albatros-@...> wrote:
> >>
> >>>
> >>> When I started b&w printing on an Epson, I thought one of the
> >>> advantages over the darkroom was that once its well set up, there
> >>> would be no trying and experimenting and that I would have 100%
> >>> predictable results.
> >>>
> >>> Now, a few hundreds or probably thousands of prints later I find that
> >>> this is
> >>> not exactly the case. On my 2100/UT7 workflow I find the following
> >>> issues:
> >>>
> >>> 1. My output from the file + Roark curves is roughly, but never
> >>> exactly what I see on my monitor. When I look at the grayscale on my
> >>> flat panel the 100% to 0%
> >>> steps are quite well separated, but in the uncorrected print the deep
> >>> shadows (around 95%
> >>> black) are not well resolved, 95% comes out totally
> >>> black: So I had to make a curve that boosts the deep shadows.
> >>>
> >>> 2. I often find myself having to do several prints of the same photo,
> >>> because the general "look" of the print is not like on the screen,  
> >>> see
> >>> also my other message about the foliage and trees.
> >>>
> >>> 3. The most mysterious thing is that my output seems to vary from  
> >>> time
> >>> to time. Sometimes I find the prints too dark compared to the screen,
> >>> sometimes they are slightly too light.
> >>>
> >>> Finally its not that different from the darkroom, I would say
> >>> gradually more predictable (maybe even by a large margin, but that is
> >>> probably because my traditional darkroom skills are so poor).
> >>>
> >>> So, do you have a 100% WYSIWYG workflow?
> >>>
> >>> Thanks for your input,
> >>>
> >>> Bernhard
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other
> > resources as
> >>> they are often being updated.
> >>>
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> >>>
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> > Message: 14
> >    Date: Sat, 16 Oct 2004 16:49:22 -0000
> >    From: "ferdinand_paris" <ferdinand_paris@y...>
> > Subject: QTRGui not retaining page sizes
> >
> >
> > Stephen
> >
> > I've noticed that in the current version of QTRGui, all the settings
> > from the last session are saved, except page size, which is always
> > reset to the size at the top of the list - Letter.  I print on A4 or
> > A3.  Not a major issue, provided I remember to reset it each time I
> > open QTRGui.  I thought an earlier version retained this setting, but
> > perhaps I am wrong (getting old and the memory is going - it's why I
> > need a camera).
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Re: Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-18 by Jerry Hadam

First - sorry about the whole digest being posted to the list. I am on 
a couple of lists now that are not in digest form and I forgot - sorry.

Second- I did not get an install script for the UC QTR soft proof 
folder. It was just a folder named "2200 QTR UC".
In my Adobe library I have two folders - Profiles and Settings.

Do I just create this folder? I will go through the tutorial again and 
see if I missed something.

Thanks to John V. and Roy (thought you were out of town).

Jerry

Jerry Hadam
jerry@...
208-726-2942
888-540-8053

In Saddletree Cutsom Framing
Crazy Horse Square-Ketchum

Box 2749
Ketchum, ID 83340

Re: [Digital BW] Re: Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-18 by Carolyn Frayn

On 10/18/04 5:46 PM, "Jerry Hadam" sent the following verbage:
> Second- I did not get an install script for the UC QTR soft proof
> folder. It was just a folder named "2200 QTR UC".
> In my Adobe library I have two folders - Profiles and Settings.
> 
> Do I just create this folder? I will go through the tutorial again and
> see if I missed something.

You are probably looking at the root library. In your users library, same
place in application support, there is a proof folder.

Carolyn

---
http://www.carolynfrayn.com

Re: Soft proof for QTR and wireless printing.

2004-10-19 by John Vitollo

Jerry Hadam wrote:
> Second- I did not get an install script for the UC QTR soft proof 
> folder. It was just a folder named "2200 QTR UC".
> In my Adobe library I have two folders - Profiles and Settings. 
> Do I just create this folder? 

I'm not sure if Carl's soft proof files have an install script or not...but Roy's 1270 soft proof 
files do.

Yes create a new folder named Proofing and place it in /Library/Application
Support/Adobe/Color/

Then manually install the soft proof files.

Move to quarantaine

This moves the raw source file on disk only. The archive index is not changed automatically, so you still need to run a manual refresh afterward.