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New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com

We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at the
end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
please.  We will initially make inks for the following printers: 2400,
R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.

We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image Print System (DIPS),
pre-filled and also as separate inks to be used with refillable
cartridges or other ink systems.

Prototype inks are extremely stable.  This means the particle size of
the pigment in the ink will not alter over time.  In many inks the ink
suffers from from particle size re-agglomeration, this means that the
particles join together in the ink to make larger particles.  These
larger particles will eventually lead to nozzle blocking in the
printer's print heads and cause poor printer performance.  There are
many reasons for this instability; poor pigment dispersion, chemical
incompatibilities in the ink, etc. Our inks are undergoing testing for
chemical compatibility and stability in our laboratories.  We will
guarantee the stability of our inks for up to 2 years.  Our pigments
are milled super fine to guarantee optimum performance.  The average
particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer; so small that it cannot be
seen by the naked eye!

We are using the latest laser technology to guarantee the particle
size in each and every batch of ink that we produce.  


We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258.  As newcomers
to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
comments please.

Thank you.

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Mark Savoia

Does the ink beta test come with the printer too?
Show quoted textHide quoted text
On Mar 2, 2007, at 8:44 AM, failedthespian wrote:

> Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com
>
> We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at the
> end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
> please.  We will initially make inks for the following printers: 2400,
> R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.
>
> We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image Print System (DIPS),
> pre-filled and also as separate inks to be used with refillable
> cartridges or other ink systems.
>
> Prototype inks are extremely stable.  This means the particle size of
> the pigment in the ink will not alter over time.  In many inks the ink
> suffers from from particle size re-agglomeration, this means that the
> particles join together in the ink to make larger particles.  These
> larger particles will eventually lead to nozzle blocking in the
> printer's print heads and cause poor printer performance.  There are
> many reasons for this instability; poor pigment dispersion, chemical
> incompatibilities in the ink, etc. Our inks are undergoing testing for
> chemical compatibility and stability in our laboratories.  We will
> guarantee the stability of our inks for up to 2 years.  Our pigments
> are milled super fine to guarantee optimum performance.  The average
> particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer; so small that it cannot be
> seen by the naked eye!
>
> We are using the latest laser technology to guarantee the particle
> size in each and every batch of ink that we produce.
>
>
> We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258.  As newcomers
> to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
> comments please.
>
> Thank you.
>
>
>
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Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

No Mark, we would expect any potential beta testers to provide their own
printers.

In all probability, we will provide a 7 ink set for the 2200, or with
head cleaner for the R1800/R800.

We reserve the right to choose who will test the inks.

Paul

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@...m, Mark Savoia
<mark@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Does the ink beta test come with the printer too?
>

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Mark Savoia

Sorry don't own any of those printers.
Mark
Show quoted textHide quoted text
On Mar 2, 2007, at 9:49 AM, failedthespian wrote:

> No Mark, we would expect any potential beta testers to provide  
> their own
> printers.
>
> In all probability, we will provide a 7 ink set for the 2200, or with
> head cleaner for the R1800/R800.
>
> We reserve the right to choose who will test the inks.
>
> Paul
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Mark Savoia
> <mark@...> wrote:
>>
>> Does the ink beta test come with the printer too?
>>
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor -------------------- 
> ~-->
> Great things are happening at Yahoo! Groups.  See the new email  
> design.
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> -------------------------------------------------------------------- 
> ~->
>
> 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  
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> 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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Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by edrudolpho

Hi Paul....  is your beta inkset designed for matte paper, gloss, or both?

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian"
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com
> 
> We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at the
> end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
> please.  We will initially make inks for the following printers: 2400,
> R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Greg

If you can send them in bottles, I'll take a look at them and consider 
putting them through my Epson 9500. But I also reserve the right to 
send them back with out trying them. I'm very particular about my inks 
having had ink lead to head replacements. At $200 for the parts and 
about 3-4 hours of my time to replace the parts and clean out the 
printer, I'm not going to rush into trying any unknown inks. You can 
contact me off list if you wish to send anything to me. I would need at 
least four ounces of each "color", but eight ounces would be better. 
Thanks, Greg.

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by djon43

Brilliant decision to target the huge installed base of excellent
older-tech and economical printers... 

...infinitely more market with 2400, R1800/R800, 2100 (presumably
2200), 1290 (presumably 1280), R300 users than with the far more
expensive new machines, and there's plenty of evidence that the 
"lesser" machines will remain gallery-able as they are today, as long
as they continue to function properly. 
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> 
> We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258.  As newcomers
> to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
> comments please.
> 
> Thank you.
>

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Hi Greg

As I said, we will only be providing a seven ink set for beta tests. 

The inks have been formulated for the 2200 and R1800.

There will be no problem with the inks, as we know that we have finest
particle size of any the graduated black inks on the market today, as
we have analysed  all competitor's products.

Paul

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Greg"
<dfaprinting@...> wrote:
>
>

RE: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by David Whistance

Hello Paul

If you can get them to me here in the UK I would willingly try them in
either an R800 or R220 (same cartridges as the R300 I believe).

David Whistance
Show quoted textHide quoted text
  -----Original Message-----
  From: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of
failedthespian
  Sent: 02 March 2007 13:44
  To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
please


  Hi, My name is Paul Banks. I am the Managing Director of Image
  Alchemy Ltd. www.image-alchemy.com

  We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at the
  end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
  please. We will initially make inks for the following printers: 2400,
  R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.

  We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image Print System (DIPS),
  pre-filled and also as separate inks to be used with refillable
  cartridges or other ink systems.

  Prototype inks are extremely stable. This means the particle size of
  the pigment in the ink will not alter over time. In many inks the ink
  suffers from from particle size re-agglomeration, this means that the
  particles join together in the ink to make larger particles. These
  larger particles will eventually lead to nozzle blocking in the
  printer's print heads and cause poor printer performance. There are
  many reasons for this instability; poor pigment dispersion, chemical
  incompatibilities in the ink, etc. Our inks are undergoing testing for
  chemical compatibility and stability in our laboratories. We will
  guarantee the stability of our inks for up to 2 years. Our pigments
  are milled super fine to guarantee optimum performance. The average
  particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer; so small that it cannot be
  seen by the naked eye!

  We are using the latest laser technology to guarantee the particle
  size in each and every batch of ink that we produce.

  We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258. As newcomers
  to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
  comments please.

  Thank you.



  


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Hi

Our inks suit both matte and gloss papers.  However, we are looking for
beta testers to provide us with their experience on a variety of
different media, produced under a variety of different conditions.

Paul


--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "edrudolpho"
<erudolph@...> wrote:
>
>
> Hi Paul....  is your beta inkset designed for matte paper, gloss, or
both?
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian"
> failedthespian@ wrote:
> >
> > Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> > Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com
> >
> > We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at
the
> > end of the month

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Steven Karafyllakis

Hi Paul;

I'm using an R1800 and a couple bigger Epsons (7600, 3800) the two 
older machines have MIS ink in them. While I'm quite happy with my 
results, I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested, but I'd like 
more info first.  I'm sure all printers on this list knowledgeable 
enough to do meaningful testing for you would.

A) Do you plan to have US distribution? Not much point in trying them 
if I won't use them later due to shipping expenses and delays.

B) Will your US price be competitive with MIS' price?

C) Is it possible to get a gray distribution swatch of some flavor? 
I'd like to see the raw undiluted color and density in each of the 
R1800 inks. 

D) At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean deep sepia, not 
the carbon-ink warmtone. Will these inks produce deep sepia as you 
want us to test them, or will that require a mix of the color set and 
the 'Black Art' set? 

E) Some one already posed the matte or glossy question, but that is 
very much of interest to me also.

F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7. 
What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years, and where 
can I find more info on the standards?
D) Your DIPS continuous inking system looks clean and well designed 
on the outside, but there are no pix of the head setup; does it use 
dampers or carts? And I assume an auto-reset chip is provided for 
each ink position?
Best Luck at PMA, looking forward to hearing more about this.

Steven Karafyllakis
http://www.stevekphoto.com




--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian" 
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
>
> Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com
> 
> We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at 
the
> end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
> please.  We will initially make inks for the following printers: 
2400,
> R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.
> 
> We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image Print System 
(DIPS),
> pre-filled and also as separate inks to be used with refillable
> cartridges or other ink systems.
> 
> Prototype inks are extremely stable.  This means the particle size 
of
> the pigment in the ink will not alter over time.  In many inks the 
ink
> suffers from from particle size re-agglomeration, this means that 
the
> particles join together in the ink to make larger particles.  These
> larger particles will eventually lead to nozzle blocking in the
> printer's print heads and cause poor printer performance.  There are
> many reasons for this instability; poor pigment dispersion, chemical
> incompatibilities in the ink, etc. Our inks are undergoing testing 
for
> chemical compatibility and stability in our laboratories.  We will
> guarantee the stability of our inks for up to 2 years.  Our pigments
> are milled super fine to guarantee optimum performance.  The average
> particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer; so small that it cannot 
be
> seen by the naked eye!
> 
> We are using the latest laser technology to guarantee the particle
> size in each and every batch of ink that we produce.  
> 
> 
> We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258.  As 
newcomers
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
> comments please.
> 
> Thank you.
>

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Steven Karafyllakis

Hi Paul;

I'm using an R1800 and a couple bigger Epsons (7600, 3800) the two 
older machines have MIS ink in them. While I'm quite happy with my 
results, I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested, but I'd like 
more info first.  I'm sure all printers on this list knowledgeable 
enough to do meaningful testing for you would.

A) Do you plan to have US distribution? Not much point in trying them 
if I won't use them later due to shipping expenses and delays.

B) Will your US price be competitive with MIS' price?

C) Is it possible to get a gray distribution swatch of some flavor? 
I'd like to see the raw undiluted color and density in each of the 
R1800 inks. 

D) At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean deep sepia, not 
the carbon-ink warmtone. Will these inks produce deep sepia as you 
want us to test them, or will that require a mix of the color set and 
the 'Black Art' set? 


E) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7. 
What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years, and where 
can I find more info on the standards?
D) Your DIPS continuous inking system looks clean and well designed 
on the outside, but there are no pix of the head setup; does it use 
dampers or carts? And I assume an auto-reset chip is provided for 
each ink position?
Best Luck at PMA, looking forward to hearing more about this.

Steven Karafyllakis
http://www.stevekphoto.com




--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian" 
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
>
> Hi
> 
> Our inks suit both matte and gloss papers.  However, we are looking 
for
> beta testers to provide us with their experience on a variety of
> different media, produced under a variety of different conditions.
> 
> Paul
> 
> 
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "edrudolpho"
> <erudolph@> wrote:
> >
> >
> > Hi Paul....  is your beta inkset designed for matte paper, gloss, 
or
> both?
> >
> > --- In 
DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian"
> > failedthespian@ wrote:
> > >
> > > Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> > > Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com
> > >
> > > We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") 
at
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> the
> > > end of the month
>

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Greg

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian" 
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Greg
> 
> As I said, we will only be providing a seven ink set for beta tests. 
> 
> The inks have been formulated for the 2200 and R1800.
> 
> There will be no problem with the inks, as we know that we have finest
> particle size of any the graduated black inks on the market today, as
> we have analysed  all competitor's products.
> 
> Paul
> 


Ok, so you are more concerned with testing a system than in testing the 
inks?

And particle size is not the most common cause of clogs. I've probably 
tested all the same inks that you have studied, and I won't use half of 
them. Well best of luck.

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Florent Thouret

Hi,

As a R1800 owner I can test them in an Efillink CIS (I prefer), or
cartridges (if you prefer).
I'm not satisfied with R1800 result in black and white, event with PFP
2.0 so I was about to switch to gray inks set.

As a first comment, I can say that fiding b&w inks is a bit (a lot in
fact) difficult here, in france, so it would be great to test inks
from europe (if I correctly found where image-alchemy.com is from).


Best Regards,
Florent
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> Hi, My name is Paul Banks.  I am the Managing Director of Image
> Alchemy Ltd.  www.image-alchemy.com

> We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") at the
> end of the month and we are looking for experienced beta testers
> please.  We will initially make inks for the following printers: 2400,
> R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.

> We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image Print System (DIPS),
> pre-filled and also as separate inks to be used with refillable
> cartridges or other ink systems.

> Prototype inks are extremely stable.  This means the particle size of
> the pigment in the ink will not alter over time.  In many inks the ink
> suffers from from particle size re-agglomeration, this means that the
> particles join together in the ink to make larger particles.  These
> larger particles will eventually lead to nozzle blocking in the
> printer's print heads and cause poor printer performance.  There are
> many reasons for this instability; poor pigment dispersion, chemical
> incompatibilities in the ink, etc. Our inks are undergoing testing for
> chemical compatibility and stability in our laboratories.  We will
> guarantee the stability of our inks for up to 2 years.  Our pigments
> are milled super fine to guarantee optimum performance.  The average
> particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer; so small that it cannot be
> seen by the naked eye!

> We are using the latest laser technology to guarantee the particle
> size in each and every batch of ink that we produce. 

> We are showing our ink system (DIPS) at PMA, booth V258.  As newcomers
> to this product sector, we would very much welcome constructive
> comments please.

> Thank you.

RE: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Paul Roark

Hi Paul,

It's always good to see a new competitor out there. 

>  www.image-alchemy.com

There doesn't seem to be enough information on the web (that I've found yet,
at least) for me to tell just what you're offering of interest in the B&W
sphere.  I'll need a bit more information to peak my interest.

> We are introducing a new graduated black ink set ("BLACK ART") 
> at the end of the month and we are looking for experienced 
> beta testers please.

> We will initially make inks for the following printers: 
> 2400, R1800/R800, 2100, 1290, R300.

Do you actually have a specific dedicated B&W inkset, or are you just
selling the individual LK, etc. inks that we use in our systems?

If there is a specific B&W inkset, some more information would be needed.
Is it a blended inkset?  What software is used, for example, Epson driver or
rip?

> We propose to sell the inks in our Digital Image 
> Print System (DIPS),

This looks like a continuous feed system.

> pre-filled and also as separate 
> inks to be used with refillable cartridges or other ink systems.

> Prototype inks are extremely stable. 

Our existing inks -- for example, Epson, MIS, Cone -- are also very stable.
It would be useful to see some comparative fade testing.

>... In many inks the ink suffers from from particle size 
> re-agglomeration, this means that the
> particles join together in the ink to make larger particles...

All pigment ink systems have dispersants for this.  The base, in fact, is
often referred to as the "dispersant."  There have been significant advances
in this part of the product.  The modern inks are in fairly good shape now.

> Our pigments are milled super fine ...
> The average particle size in our inks is 120 nanometer;

Epson and the third party inks have been at about 0.1 micron for some time.

> so small that it cannot be seen by the naked eye!

The printer dot size controls that, not the pigment particle size.  None of
the pigments used in ink jet printing are so large a person can see the
individual particles.  Large pigments last longer, but sink faster.


In general, more price and product information would be a good way to peak
more interest in this group.

I've always been a fan of open source systems, and I'm definitely moving in
that direction with respect to the inks I use.  Except at the entry level,
I'm not sure there is going to be much demand for more blended inksets.

But for the direction I'm going, if even one of your standard 2400 inks is
superior to what is on the market, if the price is right it would be of
interest and will probably sell. 

I'd be most interested in seeing evidence that either your LK or LM
outperforms Epson UC pigments or MIS pigments in fade testing.

Competition drivers the market.  Good luck with the new venture. 

Paul
www.PaulRoark.com

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Greg

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian" 
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Greg
> 
> As I said, we will only be providing a seven ink set for beta tests. 
> 
> The inks have been formulated for the 2200 and R1800.
> 
> There will be no problem with the inks, as we know that we have finest
> particle size of any the graduated black inks on the market today, as
> we have analysed  all competitor's products.
> 
> Paul
> 


This is probably going to show up as a duplicate in a few hours, but 
here goes (again).

So I take it that you are selling a complete ink system and not just 
the inks. And particle size is probably the least important factor in 
clogging with any of the newer ink formulations. I've used most of the 
competition, and some I will never run through a machine again. I've 
heard the "no problem with the inks" before and you will have to 
convince me that this is true. So as I said, I'll consider trying them 
if you send them, if not I wish you luck.

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Thanks for your comments.  We have tested all competitor inks and
would not be launching a new product just to be "second best".  We set
a target and believe we have hit it.

However, I do have to bear in mind that you are a competitor and this
is a public forum.

Kind regards,

Paul

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Roark"
<paul.roark@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Hi Paul,
> 
> It's always good to see a new competitor out there. 
> 
> >  www.image-alchemy.com
>

RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by Paul Roark

Hi Steve,

It sounds like we're all interested in some of the same things.

> I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested, 
> but I'd like more info first. 

>...

> At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean 
> deep sepia, not the carbon-ink warmtone...

I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 at Golden
Trout workshop.  I think this arrangement allows the full range of what most
will want and be very flexible.  I think we'll end up generating a lot of
profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
standard inks.

How are you generating your deep sepia?

With the old sepia I mixed for the UT2/7 toners, it was 8% Y, 8% M, and the
remainder the UT-LC (light carbon, about 50% LK).


>F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7.
>What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years, 
>and where can I find more info on the standards?

It's hard to compare inks unless they are subject to a comparison test on
the same paper and in the same fader at the same time.  Wilhelm and RIT are
trusted third parties that can probably keep their variables under control,
but for most a comparison to a known sample like an Epson or MIS ink is what
I want to see.  The test conditions also, of course, need to be disclosed so
that we can evaluate the various factors that might influence the outcome.  

>D) Your DIPS continuous inking system ...

I suspect all of these CIS/CFS systems are subject to the same problems I've
experienced and measured in the large format printers.  Only regular users
should consider them with blended B&W inksets.  For high volume work they
do, however, make sense.  If Epson manages to cut off our carts, all of us
third party ink users may be using them.  That's really no problem,
particularly if we use a non-blended, standard ink approach.  

With respect to CFS/CIS designs, I do like the idea of the dampers being
between the tubes and the heads like in large format printers.  These
easy-to-change, cheap items have screens in them that can catch the clumps
before they get into the heads.

Paul
www.PaulRoark.com

Re: [Digital BW] New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Hi Greg

I appreciate that print head clogging isn't just attributable to the
ink's particle size, but rather the tendency of those particles to
re-agglomerate.  We have studied this phenomena in the laboratory with
our own and competitors' products and know this to be the most important
factor.

Our inks are tested in an oven at a temperature of 60 C (140 F) for a
period of 3 months. and checked regularly for signs of re-agglomeration.

  The testing of our inks has proven a greatly reduce potential for head
blocking. This is due in part to the ink having an AVERAGE particle size
no greater than 120 nanometer.  From the testing we have done with
state-of-the-art laser technology to guarantee the particle size in each
and every batch of ink that we will produce.  There will be no finer
graduated ink on the market, we guarantee it!

We will sell a pre-filled ink system and also inks separately.

I trust that the above answers your questions.

Regards,

Paul
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Greg"
<dfaprinting@...> wrote:
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian"
> failedthespian@ wrote:
> >
> > Hi Greg
> >
> > As I said, we will only be providing a seven ink set for beta tests.
> >
> > The inks have been formulated for the 2200 and R1800.
> >
> > There will be no problem with the inks, as we know that we have
finest
> > particle size of any the graduated black inks on the market today,
as
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> > we have analysed  all competitor's products.
> >
> > Paul
> >
>
>
> This is probably going to show up as a duplicate in a few hours, but
> here goes (again).
>
> So I take it that you are selling a complete ink system and not just
> the inks. And particle size is probably the least important factor in
> clogging with any of the newer ink formulations. I've used most of the
> competition, and some I will never run through a machine again. I've
> heard the "no problem with the inks" before and you will have to
> convince me that this is true. So as I said, I'll consider trying them
> if you send them, if not I wish you luck.
>

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-02 by failedthespian

Steve and Paul

Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the Blue
Wool Scale (BWS).  This is an internationally accepted ISO standard that
has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm test
has not.  The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.

The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years.  Most
informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure it is
disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free life
of a certain number of years.  And yet organisations like Wilhelm
continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink has a
life expectancy of X.  This is rubbish!

We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a life
of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components of
these ink sets failed to get past BWS2.  This is a truly dreadful state
of affairs.

The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all inks
that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed.  We know from
our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so called "archival"
inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.

I trust this answers your point.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd


--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Roark"
<paul.roark@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Steve,
>
> It sounds like we're all interested in some of the same things.
>
> > I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested,
> > but I'd like more info first.
>
> >...
>
> > At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean
> > deep sepia, not the carbon-ink warmtone...
>
> I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 at
Golden
> Trout workshop.  I think this arrangement allows the full range of
what most
> will want and be very flexible.  I think we'll end up generating a lot
of
> profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
> standard inks.
>
> How are you generating your deep sepia?
>
> With the old sepia I mixed for the UT2/7 toners, it was 8% Y, 8% M,
and the
> remainder the UT-LC (light carbon, about 50% LK).
>
>
> >F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7.
> >What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years,
> >and where can I find more info on the standards?
>
> It's hard to compare inks unless they are subject to a comparison test
on
> the same paper and in the same fader at the same time.  Wilhelm and
RIT are
> trusted third parties that can probably keep their variables under
control,
> but for most a comparison to a known sample like an Epson or MIS ink
is what
> I want to see.  The test conditions also, of course, need to be
disclosed so
> that we can evaluate the various factors that might influence the
outcome.
>
> >D) Your DIPS continuous inking system ...
>
> I suspect all of these CIS/CFS systems are subject to the same
problems I've
> experienced and measured in the large format printers.  Only regular
users
> should consider them with blended B&W inksets.  For high volume work
they
> do, however, make sense.  If Epson manages to cut off our carts, all
of us
> third party ink users may be using them.  That's really no problem,
> particularly if we use a non-blended, standard ink approach.
>
> With respect to CFS/CIS designs, I do like the idea of the dampers
being
> between the tubes and the heads like in large format printers.  These
> easy-to-change, cheap items have screens in them that can catch the
clumps
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> before they get into the heads.
>
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
>

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Steve Kale

Ding, ding, ding round 2...
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: failedthespian <failedthespian@yahoo.co.uk>
Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 23:41:41 -0000
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
please

 
 
 

Steve and Paul

Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the Blue
Wool Scale (BWS).  This is an internationally accepted ISO standard that
has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm test
has not.  The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.

The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years.  Most
informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure it is
disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free life
of a certain number of years.  And yet organisations like Wilhelm
continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink has a
life expectancy of X.  This is rubbish!

We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a life
of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components of
these ink sets failed to get past BWS2.  This is a truly dreadful state
of affairs.

The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all inks
that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed.  We know from
our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so called "archival"
inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.

I trust this answers your point.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> , "Paul Roark"
<paul.roark@...> wrote:
>
> Hi Steve,
>
> It sounds like we're all interested in some of the same things.
>
> > I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested,
> > but I'd like more info first.
>
> >...
>
> > At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean
> > deep sepia, not the carbon-ink warmtone...
>
> I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 at
Golden
> Trout workshop.  I think this arrangement allows the full range of
what most
> will want and be very flexible.  I think we'll end up generating a lot
of
> profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
> standard inks.
>
> How are you generating your deep sepia?
>
> With the old sepia I mixed for the UT2/7 toners, it was 8% Y, 8% M,
and the
> remainder the UT-LC (light carbon, about 50% LK).
>
>
> >F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7.
> >What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years,
> >and where can I find more info on the standards?
>
> It's hard to compare inks unless they are subject to a comparison test
on
> the same paper and in the same fader at the same time.  Wilhelm and
RIT are
> trusted third parties that can probably keep their variables under
control,
> but for most a comparison to a known sample like an Epson or MIS ink
is what
> I want to see.  The test conditions also, of course, need to be
disclosed so
> that we can evaluate the various factors that might influence the
outcome.
>
> >D) Your DIPS continuous inking system ...
>
> I suspect all of these CIS/CFS systems are subject to the same
problems I've
> experienced and measured in the large format printers.  Only regular
users
> should consider them with blended B&W inksets.  For high volume work
they
> do, however, make sense.  If Epson manages to cut off our carts, all
of us
> third party ink users may be using them.  That's really no problem,
> particularly if we use a non-blended, standard ink approach.
>
> With respect to CFS/CIS designs, I do like the idea of the dampers
being
> between the tubes and the heads like in large format printers.  These
> easy-to-change, cheap items have screens in them that can catch the
clumps
> before they get into the heads.
>
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
>

 
    



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Steven Karafyllakis

Hi Paul; 

your upcoming 220 arrangement is exactly what I've been using in the 
R1800, thoughof course I also have both MK and PK with that printer. 
I recently tried a curve using the PK as a dark LK (DLK?) for matte 
paper, I like it a lot.


> 
> I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 
at Golden
> Trout workshop.  I think this arrangement allows the full range of 
what most
> will want and be very flexible.  I think we'll end up generating a 
lot of
> profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
> standard inks.
> 
> How are you generating your deep sepia?

My approach so far has been to blend a base full-ink sepia curve with 
a second toning curve made of only M and Y. You can only add about 15-
20 percent in toner before you start losing too much density, but 
sepia doesn't need serious density anyway. With the new version of 
QTR, a third curve, and split-toning, you can produce some really 
nice chocolaty shadows shifting up to gold highlights that I just 
love. My thanks to Roy and Stephen for adding that capability to QTR!



Steven Karafyllakis

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Nancy Wilson

Hello, 

I have an Epson 2200 and would be interested in testing your new inks 
but would first also like more answers.  First, Steven's questions 
below:

> A) Do you plan to have US distribution? Not much point in trying 
them if I won't use them later due to shipping expenses and delays.
> 
> B) Will your US price be competitive with MIS' price?
> 
> C) Is it possible to get a gray distribution swatch of some flavor? 
> I'd like to see the raw undiluted color and density in each of the 
> R1800 inks. (2200 inks)
> 
> D) At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean deep sepia, not 
> the carbon-ink warmtone. Will these inks produce deep sepia as you 
> want us to test them, or will that require a mix of the color set 
and the 'Black Art' set? 
> 
> E) Some one already posed the matte or glossy question, but that is 
> very much of interest to me also.
Steven 

Then I have my own questions:

You want the beta testers to test the ink with a variety of papers. 

1.  Are you providing the papers so that the test runs are equal?

2.  Does your system use its own RIP?

3.  Is this a continuous feed system or do you provide Epson type 
carts?  Do we have a choice?

Thank you.  Nancy

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Greg

Like many others, I offered, they denied. I guess my 9 years of inkjet
printing experience is of no value to them, and it seems like it's
simply because (gasp!) I only have an older 6 channel printer. I bet
Paul feels left out that he can't try these in his 7500, and I bet
John feels left out that he can't empty the K6 inks out of one of his
7000's to try these too. And maybe Roy will feel left out with his
7500... Should I go on?

And to go for the humorous side of things....

The blue sheep (where they get the blue wool ;-] ):
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v329/Greg_E/Blue-Sheep.jpg

(hopefully Yahoo won't slaughter the link)

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Steven Karafyllakis

Paul;

Anyone that's been at this for a few years remembers the odd 
exagerated Epson claim, or Wilhelm having to redesign his methodology 
to account for reciprocity. So in absolute terms you're probably 
right, many of these claims might indeed be rubbish, but they give us 
some kind of approximate reference. As Paul Roark mentioned, we also 
like to add our own side-by-side comparisons with known materials to 
get a better idea. 

While I've heard of the BWS test standards I don't know enough about 
them to have even the foggiest what a BWS of 7 means. So a little web 
research produced the following:

Blue Wool Test. Most lightfastness tests expose paint samples to 
abnormally intense light radiation, because this more quickly 
produces fading or discoloration in impermanent paints. Thus, samples 
of artist's pigments may be tested by exposure to direct sunlight, 
even though paintings are normally displayed under much weaker indoor 
lighting. (Thanks to low latitude sunlight intensity and largely 
cloudless climate, it is generally accepted that the most rigorous 
outdoor pigment testing is done at commercial sites in Florida or 
Arizona, USA.) 

How much light exposure are we talking about? Direct outdoor sunlight 
or indirect sunlight in a bright room yields anywhere from 5,000 to 
100,000 lux of illumination. This can produce a cumulative radiance 
exposure (depending on weather) of up to 25 megalux hours annually, 
which is 30 to 50 times higher than the brightest art gallery 
illumination.
 
  
 The problem then is to measure the amount of light exposure the test 
samples receive. The current solution is the blue wool textile fading 
card or blue wool scale (at right). This consists of eight strips of 
wool mounted side by side on a small card; each strip or reference is 
colored with a blue dye that fades after exposure to a known amount 
of light. The dyes have been chosen so that each reference takes 
about two to three times longer to begin fading as the next lower 
reference in the scale. (Under normal solar testing conditions, 
reference 1, the least permanent, will begin to fade in 3 hours to 3 
days, depending on geographic location, season, cloud cover and 
humidity; reference 3 will fade in 5 days to 2 weeks; reference 6 in 
6 to 16 weeks; and reference 8, the most permanent, in 6 to 15 
months.) These scales are used for paint lightfastness testing under 
international standard ISO 105-B, and are also used by gallery 
curators to measure the accumulated amount of light received by 
museum displays of paintings, textiles or photographic prints.  

And from the  Fine Art Trade Guild website: 
'Recent tests show that the resulting print can be lightfast to very 
high levels with a minimum of six on the Blue Wool test, or 25 years 
by Wilhelm Institute tests.'

Interesting.

Steve Karafyllakis

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "failedthespian" 
<failedthespian@...> wrote:
>
> Steve and Paul
> 
> Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the 
Blue
> Wool Scale (BWS).  This is an internationally accepted ISO standard 
that
> has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm 
test
> has not.  The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
> institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.
> 
> The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years.  Most
> informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure 
it is
> disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free 
life
> of a certain number of years.  And yet organisations like Wilhelm
> continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink 
has a
> life expectancy of X.  This is rubbish!
> 
> We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a 
life
> of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components 
of
> these ink sets failed to get past BWS2.  This is a truly dreadful 
state
> of affairs.
> 
> The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all 
inks
> that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed.  We know 
from
> our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so 
called "archival"
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.
> 
> I trust this answers your point.
> 
> Paul Banks
> Image Alchemy Ltd
> 
>

RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Tom Baker

I would like to put to rest any thought that Paul is a 'competitor' to these new inks.  Paul is ABSOLUTELY after the best, least expensive, most available solution to b&w printing.  MIS has/is a partner is helping advance this vision.  But, if there is a solution that is a better fit for the model, Paul will be the first to embrace it.  
   
  I also know that Paul listens and thinks about all the new thoughts on the subject that he receives from this forum and other sources.  He's definitely on our side.
   
  *********

Paul Roark <paul.roark@...> wrote:
          Hi Paul,

>... I do have to bear in mind that you are a competitor 
> and this is a public forum.

No, I'm not a competitor. I'm a user. In my latest inkset I recommend
Epson LM. I'm after the best.

Paul
www.PaulRoark.com 



         


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by wkm@kauaiphotos.biz

Where have I heard this "bws" stuff before. Hmmmmmm

Walt
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Steve Kale [mailto:stevekale@...]
>Sent: Friday, March 2, 2007 02:28 PM
>To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
>Subject: Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please
>
>Ding, ding, ding round 2...
>
>
>
>From: failedthespian <failedthespian@...>
>Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 23:41:41 -0000
>To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
>please
>
> 
> 
> 
>
>Steve and Paul
>
>Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the Blue
>Wool Scale (BWS).  This is an internationally accepted ISO standard that
>has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm test
>has not.  The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
>institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.
>
>The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years.  Most
>informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure it is
>disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free life
>of a certain number of years.  And yet organisations like Wilhelm
>continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink has a
>life expectancy of X.  This is rubbish!
>
>We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a life
>of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components of
>these ink sets failed to get past BWS2.  This is a truly dreadful state
>of affairs.
>
>The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all inks
>that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed.  We know from
>our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so called "archival"
>inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.
>
>I trust this answers your point.
>
>Paul Banks
>Image Alchemy Ltd
>
>--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
><mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> , "Paul Roark"
><paul.roark@...> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Steve,
>>
>> It sounds like we're all interested in some of the same things.
>>
>> > I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested,
>> > but I'd like more info first.
>>
>> >...
>>
>> > At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean
>> > deep sepia, not the carbon-ink warmtone...
>>
>> I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 at
>Golden
>> Trout workshop.  I think this arrangement allows the full range of
>what most
>> will want and be very flexible.  I think we'll end up generating a lot
>of
>> profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
>> standard inks.
>>
>> How are you generating your deep sepia?
>>
>> With the old sepia I mixed for the UT2/7 toners, it was 8% Y, 8% M,
>and the
>> remainder the UT-LC (light carbon, about 50% LK).
>>
>>
>> >F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7.
>> >What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years,
>> >and where can I find more info on the standards?
>>
>> It's hard to compare inks unless they are subject to a comparison test
>on
>> the same paper and in the same fader at the same time.  Wilhelm and
>RIT are
>> trusted third parties that can probably keep their variables under
>control,
>> but for most a comparison to a known sample like an Epson or MIS ink
>is what
>> I want to see.  The test conditions also, of course, need to be
>disclosed so
>> that we can evaluate the various factors that might influence the
>outcome.
>>
>> >D) Your DIPS continuous inking system ...
>>
>> I suspect all of these CIS/CFS systems are subject to the same
>problems I've
>> experienced and measured in the large format printers.  Only regular
>users
>> should consider them with blended B&W inksets.  For high volume work
>they
>> do, however, make sense.  If Epson manages to cut off our carts, all
>of us
>> third party ink users may be using them.  That's really no problem,
>> particularly if we use a non-blended, standard ink approach.
>>
>> With respect to CFS/CIS designs, I do like the idea of the dampers
>being
>> between the tubes and the heads like in large format printers.  These
>> easy-to-change, cheap items have screens in them that can catch the
>clumps
>> before they get into the heads.
>>
>> Paul
>> www.PaulRoark.com
>>
>
> 
>    
>
>
>
>[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
>
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>
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>- 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.
> 
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Tom Baker

This is starting to sound like Futures all over again, only in monochrome.
   
  TB
  

wkm@... wrote:
          Where have I heard this "bws" stuff before. Hmmmmmm

Walt
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Steve Kale [mailto:stevekale@...]
>Sent: Friday, March 2, 2007 02:28 PM
>To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
>Subject: Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please
>
>Ding, ding, ding round 2...
>
>
>
>From: failedthespian <failedthespian@...>
>Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 23:41:41 -0000
>To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
>Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
>please
>
> 
> 
> 
>
>Steve and Paul
>
>Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the Blue
>Wool Scale (BWS). This is an internationally accepted ISO standard that
>has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm test
>has not. The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
>institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.
>
>The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years. Most
>informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure it is
>disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free life
>of a certain number of years. And yet organisations like Wilhelm
>continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink has a
>life expectancy of X. This is rubbish!
>
>We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a life
>of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components of
>these ink sets failed to get past BWS2. This is a truly dreadful state
>of affairs.
>
>The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all inks
>that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed. We know from
>our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so called "archival"
>inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.
>
>I trust this answers your point.
>
>Paul Banks
>Image Alchemy Ltd
>
>--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
><mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> , "Paul Roark"
><paul.roark@...> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Steve,
>>
>> It sounds like we're all interested in some of the same things.
>>
>> > I'm also eternally curious, so I'm interested,
>> > but I'd like more info first.
>>
>> >...
>>
>> > At least 50% of my printing is sepia, and I mean
>> > deep sepia, not the carbon-ink warmtone...
>>
>> I'm going to put LC, LM and Y, (along with K, LK and LLK) in a 220 at
>Golden
>> Trout workshop. I think this arrangement allows the full range of
>what most
>> will want and be very flexible. I think we'll end up generating a lot
>of
>> profiles that will be useable in a wide range of printers with these
>> standard inks.
>>
>> How are you generating your deep sepia?
>>
>> With the old sepia I mixed for the UT2/7 toners, it was 8% Y, 8% M,
>and the
>> remainder the UT-LC (light carbon, about 50% LK).
>>
>>
>> >F) You claim a fade resistance of ISO 105 - B02 standard of BWS 7.
>> >What does that mean in either Wilhelm or real-time years,
>> >and where can I find more info on the standards?
>>
>> It's hard to compare inks unless they are subject to a comparison test
>on
>> the same paper and in the same fader at the same time. Wilhelm and
>RIT are
>> trusted third parties that can probably keep their variables under
>control,
>> but for most a comparison to a known sample like an Epson or MIS ink
>is what
>> I want to see. The test conditions also, of course, need to be
>disclosed so
>> that we can evaluate the various factors that might influence the
>outcome.
>>
>> >D) Your DIPS continuous inking system ...
>>
>> I suspect all of these CIS/CFS systems are subject to the same
>problems I've
>> experienced and measured in the large format printers. Only regular
>users
>> should consider them with blended B&W inksets. For high volume work
>they
>> do, however, make sense. If Epson manages to cut off our carts, all
>of us
>> third party ink users may be using them. That's really no problem,
>> particularly if we use a non-blended, standard ink approach.
>>
>> With respect to CFS/CIS designs, I do like the idea of the dampers
>being
>> between the tubes and the heads like in large format printers. These
>> easy-to-change, cheap items have screens in them that can catch the
>clumps
>> before they get into the heads.
>>
>> Paul
>> www.PaulRoark.com
>>
>
> 
> 
>
>
>
>[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.
> 
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>



         


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Paul Roark

> Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).

I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been used by
many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not appear to
be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet pigments.

Let me quote Lyson:

"Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading of which
Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out. However, the
test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual indoor
display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
(www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the main, been
adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute) document
'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the process of
being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will become the
International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html 


I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to bother with
them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give enough
information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is not
what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not have the
time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move forward at
the speed this industry moves.

Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool rating of
7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  (See,
for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast)  This
translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux for 12
hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900 megalux
hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457 Wilhelm
years of display.  

Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is between
the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457 Wilhelm
years of display.

It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and I don't
think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter periods, but
long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some inks
does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
"Wilhelm" year.)  

As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed samples for
what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the MIS UT7
did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3 B&W inks
on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm rates
the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV glass).
So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor display?  I
don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to that stage.
That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick did a
test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up with a
rating of 681 years. 

Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce factors
that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see most of
the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading and
experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.

At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7 is fine,
but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me these new
inks are any different than the others that are out there.

I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have something
special.  

Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that significant
progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments we use
are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks" the
Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the pigment
lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their soluble
form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of display life?

Paul
www.PaulRoark.com

RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by Gary W. Weaver

Well, there are millions who've done color & B&W since the BJC400 stylus400
days. Not to mention art on chain printers  :  )

gar
Show quoted textHide quoted text
-----Original Message-----
From: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of Greg
Sent: Friday, March 02, 2007 8:05 PM
To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
please


Like many others, I offered, they denied. I guess my 9 years of inkjet
printing experience is of no value to them, and it seems like it's
simply because (gasp!) I only have an older 6 channel printer. I bet
Paul feels left out that he can't try these in his 7500, and I bet
John feels left out that he can't empty the K6 inks out of one of his
7000's to try these too. And maybe Roy will feel left out with his
7500... Should I go on?

And to go for the humorous side of things....

The blue sheep (where they get the blue wool ;-] ):
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v329/Greg_E/Blue-Sheep.jpg

(hopefully Yahoo won't slaughter the link)




Please visit the Group Homepage to check the Files, and other resources as
they are often being updated.

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If you wish to receive no emails or just a daily digest, or you wish to
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Please follow these basic guidelines:
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Hostile, aggressive or argumentative users may be removed from the
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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by wkm@kauaiphotos.biz

I'd almost be willing to bet on it. The website sings the same ol' song

Walt
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Tom Baker [mailto:tbaker1328@...]
>Sent: Friday, March 2, 2007 06:50 PM
>To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
>Subject: Re:  [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers     wanted please
>
>This is starting to sound like Futures all over again, only in monochrome.
>   
>  TB
>  
>
>wkm@... wrote:
>          Where have I heard this "bws" stuff before. Hmmmmmm
>
>Walt

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Steve Kale

Failed Thespian

I really would encourage you to have some side by side testing done should
you wish your new ink set to gain some serious traction.  It generally
doesn’t pay to fight the market, especially one as feisty as this one.  This
path has been well-trodden and very recently.

Regards

Steve
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: Paul Roark <paul.roark@...>
Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 21:02:14 -0800
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

 
 
 


> Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).

I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been used by
many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not appear to
be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet pigments.

Let me quote Lyson:

"Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading of which
Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out. However, the
test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual indoor
display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
(www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the main, been
adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute) document
'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the process of
being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will become the
International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html

I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to bother with
them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give enough
information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is not
what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not have the
time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move forward at
the speed this industry moves.

Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool rating of
7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  (See,
for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast)  This
translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux for 12
hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900 megalux
hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457 Wilhelm
years of display.  

Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is between
the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457 Wilhelm
years of display.

It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and I don't
think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter periods, but
long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some inks
does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
"Wilhelm" year.)  

As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed samples for
what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the MIS UT7
did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3 B&W inks
on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm rates
the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV glass).
So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor display?  I
don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to that stage.
That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick did a
test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up with a
rating of 681 years.

Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce factors
that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see most of
the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading and
experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.

At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7 is fine,
but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me these new
inks are any different than the others that are out there.

I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have something
special.  

Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that significant
progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments we use
are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks" the
Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the pigment
lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their soluble
form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of display life?

Paul
www.PaulRoark.com 

 
    



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by David Keenan

>>This is starting to sound like Futures all over again, only in monochrome.

> I'd almost be willing to bet on it. The website sings the same ol' song

Please explain...

Dave.
-- 
Web Site: www.david-keenan.com
2007 PAW: www.david-keenan.com/paw
2006 EuroBlog: www.david-keenan.com/euroblog


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by failedthespian

Thanks for your advice.  However, all our published testing is done by
independent third parties to internationally agreed standards.  If we
think the "... King is naked", we will say so, irrespective of group
sensibilities.

We use hard scientific data and then seek independent corroboration from
respected independent organisations.

As a matter of record, we use The Printing Industries Research
Association International (PIRAi) and Leeds University Department of
Colour Chemistry.  Incidentally, both organisations use the Blue Wool
Scale test together with Delta-E readings; as does The Society of Dyers
and Colourists.

I think it is disingenuous to suggest Image Alchemy is somewhat
eccentric in preferring to use scientifically sound research, carried
out by reputable and independent research organisations.

I do have a problem with Wilhelm Imaging Research (WIR) stating that so
and so ink will last X number of years before fading.  We know that
Lyson's Fotonic ink was accredited by WIR as having a life of 70 years
and yet in an independent test carried out by Leeds University's
Department of Colour Chemistry, the magenta and light magenta inks
failed to get past BWS 2!

My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a level of
credibility that they often don't deserve.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Steve Kale
<stevekale@...> wrote:
>
> Failed Thespian
>
> I really would encourage you to have some side by side testing done
should
> you wish your new ink set to gain some serious traction.  It generally
> doesn’t pay to fight the market, especially one as feisty as
this one.  This
> path has been well-trodden and very recently.
>
> Regards
>
> Steve
>
>
>
> From: Paul Roark paul.roark@...
> Reply-To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
> Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 21:02:14 -0800
> To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool
ratings
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> > the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).
>
> I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been
used by
> many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not
appear to
> be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet
pigments.
>
> Let me quote Lyson:
>
> "Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading of
which
> Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out. However,
the
> test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual
indoor
> display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
> (www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the
main, been
> adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
document
> 'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the process
of
> being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will become
the
> International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
> http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html
>
> I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to bother
with
> them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give
enough
> information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is
not
> what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not
have the
> time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move forward
at
> the speed this industry moves.
>
> Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool
rating of
> 7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable. 
(See,
> for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast) 
This
> translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux
for 12
> hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900
megalux
> hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is
between
> the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and I
don't
> think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter
periods, but
> long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some
inks
> does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
> "Wilhelm" year.)
>
> As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed
samples for
> what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the
MIS UT7
> did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3 B&W
inks
> on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm
rates
> the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV
glass).
> So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor
display?  I
> don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to that
stage.
> That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick
did a
> test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up
with a
> rating of 681 years.
>
> Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce
factors
> that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see most
of
> the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
> standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading
and
> experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.
>
> At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7 is
fine,
> but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me
these new
> inks are any different than the others that are out there.
>
> I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have
something
> special.
>
> Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that
significant
> progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments
we use
> are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks"
the
> Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the
pigment
> lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their
soluble
> form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of display
life?
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by failedthespian

I resent the smear that Image Alchemy is in any way purporting to market
ink products that are not wholly reputable and perform in accordance
with independently sourced published research data.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
www.image-alchemy.com
www.image-alchemy.de




--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "David Keenan"
<ausdlk@...> wrote:
>
> >>This is starting to sound like Futures all over again, only in
monochrome.
>
> > I'd almost be willing to bet on it. The website sings the same ol'
song
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Please explain...
>
> Dave.
> --
> Web Site: www.david-keenan.com
> 2007 PAW: www.david-keenan.com/paw
> 2006 EuroBlog: www.david-keenan.com/euroblog
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by CDTobie@aol.com

In a message dated 3/3/07 9:17:55 AM, failedthespian@... writes:


> My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a level of
> credibility that they often don't deserve.
> 

Unfortunately very shady companies have used that same claim and logic for 
prefering Blue Wool over Wilhelm in the past, and the result has been inksets 
that were claimed to be very long-lived via the Blue Wook standard, which were 
extremely short-lived in reality. At least with the Wilhelm failures we know 
exactly what went wrong. If you are looking for legitimacy in the inkjet market, 
you will need to use the same types of testing the big players (Epson, HP) 
use, not those that the fly-by-nights (I'll avoid inserting a list here <G>) 
use, no matter what your personal opinions of the various test methods may be; 
its not yourself you need to convince.

C. David Tobie
Product Technology Manager
ColorVision Business Unit
Datacolor Inc.
CDTobie@...
www.colorvision.com



**************************************
 AOL now offers free email to everyone. 
 Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by failedthespian

Paul, Regarding you comments and dismissal of the Blue Wool Test, you
are out of step with virtually every major organisation involved with
testing colour materials for fading.  In my experience they all use the
Blue Wool Scale and Delta-E values.

Additionally, your assertion that you are not a competitor to Image
Alchemy also rings hollow.  In fact in your email to me of yesterday you
state, "... It's always good to see a new competitor".

Prior to deciding to manufacture our own inks, we approached a number of
different manufacturers including MIS Associates and you.  You might
recall that I spent an hour and forty minutes speaking with you about
the various merits of various manufacturer's offerings.  In fact I was
referred to you by MISA.

Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot comment again concerning
this matter.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
www.image-alchemy.com
www.image-alchemy.de
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Roark"
<paul.roark@...> wrote:
>
>
> > Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> > the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).
>
> I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been
used by
> many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not
appear to
> be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet
pigments.
>
> Let me quote Lyson:
>
> "Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading of
which
> Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out. However,
the
> test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual
indoor
> display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
> (www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the
main, been
> adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
document
> 'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the process
of
> being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will become
the
> International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
> http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html
>
>
> I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to bother
with
> them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give
enough
> information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is
not
> what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not
have the
> time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move forward
at
> the speed this industry moves.
>
> Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool
rating of
> 7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable. 
(See,
> for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast) 
This
> translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux
for 12
> hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900
megalux
> hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is
between
> the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and I
don't
> think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter
periods, but
> long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some
inks
> does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
> "Wilhelm" year.)
>
> As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed
samples for
> what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the
MIS UT7
> did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3 B&W
inks
> on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm
rates
> the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV
glass).
> So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor
display?  I
> don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to that
stage.
> That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick
did a
> test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up
with a
> rating of 681 years.
>
> Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce
factors
> that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see most
of
> the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
> standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading
and
> experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.
>
> At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7 is
fine,
> but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me
these new
> inks are any different than the others that are out there.
>
> I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have
something
> special.
>
> Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that
significant
> progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments
we use
> are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks"
the
> Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the
pigment
> lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their
soluble
> form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of display
life?
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
>

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by failedthespian

With all due respect, just because one rogue company made reference to
the BWS test, isn't grounds for saying it isn't relevant or that it
isn't a more scientific basis than WIR test criteria.  That's like
throwing out the baby with the bath water!

Your missing the point.  The OEM's go to WIR precisely because he hands
out certificates saying that "X" ink will last one hundred and forty
years.  In the scientific community WIR is an object of a certain amount
of derision.

I am happy to publish the independent test data done on a number of
competitors inks by Leeds University's DCC - including the flawed
Fotonic inks that WIR are so enamored with.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
www.image-alchemy.com
www.image-alchemy.de
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, CDTobie@... wrote:
>
>
> In a message dated 3/3/07 9:17:55 AM, failedthespian@... writes:
>
>
> > My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a
level of
> > credibility that they often don't deserve.
> >
>
> Unfortunately very shady companies have used that same claim and logic
for
> prefering Blue Wool over Wilhelm in the past, and the result has been
inksets
> that were claimed to be very long-lived via the Blue Wook standard,
which were
> extremely short-lived in reality. At least with the Wilhelm failures
we know
> exactly what went wrong. If you are looking for legitimacy in the
inkjet market,
> you will need to use the same types of testing the big players (Epson,
HP)
> use, not those that the fly-by-nights (I'll avoid inserting a list
here <G>)
> use, no matter what your personal opinions of the various test methods
may be;
> its not yourself you need to convince.
>
> C. David Tobie
> Product Technology Manager
> ColorVision Business Unit
> Datacolor Inc.
> CDTobie@...
> www.colorvision.com
>
>
>
> **************************************
>  AOL now offers free email to everyone.
>  Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Mark Savoia

Guys, can we stop the pissing match?
Mark
Show quoted textHide quoted text
On Mar 3, 2007, at 9:52 AM, failedthespian wrote:

> With all due respect, just because one rogue company made reference to
> the BWS test, isn't grounds for saying it isn't relevant or that it
> isn't a more scientific basis than WIR test criteria.  That's like
> throwing out the baby with the bath water!
>
> Your missing the point.  The OEM's go to WIR precisely because he  
> hands
> out certificates saying that "X" ink will last one hundred and forty
> years.  In the scientific community WIR is an object of a certain  
> amount
> of derision.
>
> I am happy to publish the independent test data done on a number of
> competitors inks by Leeds University's DCC - including the flawed
> Fotonic inks that WIR are so enamored with.
>
> Paul Banks
> Image Alchemy Ltd
> www.image-alchemy.com
> www.image-alchemy.de
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, CDTobie@...  
> wrote:
>>
>>
>> In a message dated 3/3/07 9:17:55 AM, failedthespian@... writes:
>>
>>
>>> My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a
> level of
>>> credibility that they often don't deserve.
>>>
>>
>> Unfortunately very shady companies have used that same claim and  
>> logic
> for
>> prefering Blue Wool over Wilhelm in the past, and the result has been
> inksets
>> that were claimed to be very long-lived via the Blue Wook standard,
> which were
>> extremely short-lived in reality. At least with the Wilhelm failures
> we know
>> exactly what went wrong. If you are looking for legitimacy in the
> inkjet market,
>> you will need to use the same types of testing the big players  
>> (Epson,
> HP)
>> use, not those that the fly-by-nights (I'll avoid inserting a list
> here <G>)
>> use, no matter what your personal opinions of the various test  
>> methods
> may be;
>> its not yourself you need to convince.
>>
>> C. David Tobie
>> Product Technology Manager
>> ColorVision Business Unit
>> Datacolor Inc.
>> CDTobie@...
>> www.colorvision.com
>>
>>
>>
>> **************************************
>>  AOL now offers free email to everyone.
>>  Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
>>
>>
>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by wkm@kauaiphotos.biz

>With all due respect, just because one rogue company made reference to
>the BWS test, isn't grounds for saying it isn't relevant or that it
>isn't a more scientific basis than WIR test criteria.  That's like
>throwing out the baby with the bath water!

Actually it was more than one company


>Your missing the point.  The OEM's go to WIR precisely because he hands
>out certificates saying that "X" ink will last one hundred and forty
>years.  In the scientific community WIR is an object of a certain amount
>of derision.

The same is true (as you're finding out) with the folks who print "in the trenches" regarding the BWS method of testing


>I am happy to publish the independent test data done on a number of
>competitors inks by Leeds University's DCC - including the flawed
>Fotonic inks that WIR are so enamored with.

and I'll be happy to run your inks thru my trusty old 2200, hang them in my sunny south facing window here in warm and humid Hawaii along with a few other "known performers" and see how they stack up. The way to my heart is not with claims of longevity or extreme cost savings. It's performance in the real world.

Good luck, Walt

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Ernst Dinkla

failedthespian wrote:

> 
> I do have a problem with Wilhelm Imaging Research (WIR) stating that so
> and so ink will last X number of years before fading.  We know that
> Lyson's Fotonic ink was accredited by WIR as having a life of 70 years
> and yet in an independent test carried out by Leeds University's
> Department of Colour Chemistry, the magenta and light magenta inks
> failed to get past BWS 2!
> 
> My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a level of
> credibility that they often don't deserve.

I wonder where you get the information that Lyson's Fotonic 
ink was accredited by WIR as having a life of 70 years.

The Fotonic dye ink as used in Epson CcMmYK printer models 
failed totally in WIR tests on Hahnem\ufffdhle coatings like used 
on German Etching, PhotoRag. On suitable gelatine gloss papers 
it was somewhat better but nowhere near 70 years. What proved 
to be wrong in Lyson's approach was that they thought they 
could adapt their CMYK dye ink for the Iris inkjet + uncoated 
rag papers to the Epson CcMmYK + inkjet coated papers.  That 
Iris CMYK dye ink on uncoated rag papers (Arches Iris etc) was 
quite fade resistant (with the tests of that time) but not 
waterproof at all.
Everything improved since that time, WIR testing, inkjet inks 
in general, water resistance, but not the Fotonic inks, they 
are as bad as they were >6 years ago. We had them for some 
months in our Epson 9000's and were aware of the fading before 
Wilhelm confirmed our findings. Their PH grade also made 
switching from Epson to Fotonic and to Generations pigment ink 
a risky business.

You probably will still find a fade numbers page on Lyson's 
site that shows the misleading representation of their own 
fade tests (they claim based on WIR testing methods). The 
Fotonic inks are only used in (now old) CMYK printers, the 
Lysonic with the bad gamut in the (now old) CcMmYk printers. 
That and some Lyson generated extrapolations should make them 
acceptable. A competition dye ink by Van Son as used in an 
Epson CcMmYk should add more weight to their numbers. In 
practice that Van Son ink was as bad but worse if used in a 
CcMmYk models, the ones Lyson avoided in teh Fotonic tests.

There was actually quite a discussion between Lyson and WIR 
when the Fotonic test results were published. Not that Lyson 
stopped advertising its claims in Europe, that continued for 
more than a year.

There are better samples you should compare your inks to. 
Tested by Wilhelm or not. Wilhelm has been wrong at some 
point, admitted that and adapted the method. The Fotonic test 
was before that time but it failed already to the old standard.

Met vriendelijke groeten, Ernst


|  Dinkla Grafische Techniek  |
|     www.pigment-print.com    |
|             ( unvollendet )            |

Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted please

2007-03-03 by johndivola2003

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Steve Kale <
stevekale@...> wrote:



>
> Ding, ding, ding round 2...
> 
> 
> 
> From: failedthespian <failedthespian@...>
> Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 23:41:41 -0000
> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks - beta testers wanted
> please
> 
>  
>  
>  
> 
> Steve and Paul
> Say what you will concern Henry Wilhelm's methods he is at least a third 
party with a stake in remaining objective.  And, although the statements 
concerning the number of years before significant fading might be 
questionable, it at least gives one relative fade data compared to other ink 
sets.

The last individuals I noticed invoking  "accepted standard; the Blue
Wool Scale (BWS)" were promoting the Nanochrome ink set.  We ordered 
these inks for my University and the inks were exceptionally fugitive, fading 
significantly within months.  There were other issues as well that I won't go 
into here.  So, without an external review of the stability of the inks by an 
objective reviewer I find stability claims of little value.

John Divola
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard; the Blue
> Wool Scale (BWS).  This is an internationally accepted ISO standard that
> has been in existence for over eighty years; whereas the Wilhelm test
> has not.  The BWS test is in use by the worlds' most respected
> institutions - whereas the Wilhelm test is not.
> 
> The BWS does not predict fade properties in terms of years.  Most
> informed students will understand that due to reciprocity failure it is
> disingenuous to claim that a particular ink will have a fade free life
> of a certain number of years.  And yet organisations like Wilhelm
> continue to churn out figures conferring that this ink or that ink has a
> life expectancy of X.  This is rubbish!
> 
> We know that certain inks that have been accredited with having a life
> of seventy years, and yet the magenta and light magenta components of
> these ink sets failed to get past BWS2.  This is a truly dreadful state
> of affairs.
> 
> The Fine Art Trade Guild sets a minimum standard of BWS6 for all inks
> that are to be used for prints intended to be displayed.  We know from
> our own BWS testing that a considerable number of so called "archival"
> inks accredited by Wilhelm would fail this basic test.
> 
> I trust this answers your point.
> 
> Paul Banks
> Image Alchemy Ltd
> 
>

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Steve Kale

I wasn’t suggesting WIR tests. I suggested independent side-by-side
comparisons under controlled conditions.  Show the comparative deltaEs.  No
extrapolations, just comparative performance tests.  Nice and simple. That
will sell.  The rest won’t, at least not here. It’s your call whether you
listen to your audience or not....
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: failedthespian <failedthespian@...>
Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Sat, 03 Mar 2007 14:17:11 -0000
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings


Thanks for your advice.  However, all our published testing is done by
independent third parties to internationally agreed standards.  If we
think the "... King is naked", we will say so, irrespective of group
sensibilities.

We use hard scientific data and then seek independent corroboration from
respected independent organisations.

As a matter of record, we use The Printing Industries Research
Association International (PIRAi) and Leeds University Department of
Colour Chemistry.  Incidentally, both organisations use the Blue Wool
Scale test together with Delta-E readings; as does The Society of Dyers
and Colourists.

I think it is disingenuous to suggest Image Alchemy is somewhat
eccentric in preferring to use scientifically sound research, carried
out by reputable and independent research organisations.

I do have a problem with Wilhelm Imaging Research (WIR) stating that so
and so ink will last X number of years before fading.  We know that
Lyson's Fotonic ink was accredited by WIR as having a life of 70 years
and yet in an independent test carried out by Leeds University's
Department of Colour Chemistry, the magenta and light magenta inks
failed to get past BWS 2!

My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a level of
credibility that they often don't deserve.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> , Steve Kale
<stevekale@...> wrote:
>
> Failed Thespian
>
> I really would encourage you to have some side by side testing done
should
> you wish your new ink set to gain some serious traction.  It generally
> doesn’t pay to fight the market, especially one as feisty as
this one.  This
> path has been well-trodden and very recently.
>
> Regards
>
> Steve
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Gary W. Weaver

Hi all,

If I had said it's nice to see new competition, it would have meant that
it's good that Epson has another  competitor and I have more choices.

gar
Show quoted textHide quoted text
-----Original Message-----
From: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of
failedthespian
Sent: Saturday, March 03, 2007 7:37 AM
To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings


Paul, Regarding you comments and dismissal of the Blue Wool Test, you
are out of step with virtually every major organisation involved with
testing colour materials for fading.  In my experience they all use the
Blue Wool Scale and Delta-E values.

Additionally, your assertion that you are not a competitor to Image
Alchemy also rings hollow.  In fact in your email to me of yesterday you
state, "... It's always good to see a new competitor".

Prior to deciding to manufacture our own inks, we approached a number of
different manufacturers including MIS Associates and you.  You might
recall that I spent an hour and forty minutes speaking with you about
the various merits of various manufacturer's offerings.  In fact I was
referred to you by MISA.

Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot comment again concerning
this matter.

Paul Banks
Image Alchemy Ltd
www.image-alchemy.com
www.image-alchemy.de
--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Paul Roark"
<paul.roark@...> wrote:
>
>
> > Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> > the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).
>
> I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been
used by
> many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not
appear to
> be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet
pigments.
>
> Let me quote Lyson:
>
> "Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading of
which
> Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out. However,
the
> test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual
indoor
> display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
> (www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the
main, been
> adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
document
> 'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the process
of
> being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will become
the
> International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
> http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html
>
>
> I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to bother
with
> them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give
enough
> information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is
not
> what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not
have the
> time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move forward
at
> the speed this industry moves.
>
> Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool
rating of
> 7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.
(See,
> for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast)
This
> translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux
for 12
> hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900
megalux
> hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is
between
> the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
>
> It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and I
don't
> think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter
periods, but
> long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some
inks
> does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
> "Wilhelm" year.)
>
> As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed
samples for
> what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the
MIS UT7
> did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3 B&W
inks
> on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm
rates
> the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV
glass).
> So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor
display?  I
> don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to that
stage.
> That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick
did a
> test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up
with a
> rating of 681 years.
>
> Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce
factors
> that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see most
of
> the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
> standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading
and
> experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.
>
> At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7 is
fine,
> but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me
these new
> inks are any different than the others that are out there.
>
> I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have
something
> special.
>
> Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that
significant
> progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments
we use
> are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks"
the
> Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the
pigment
> lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their
soluble
> form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of display
life?
>
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
>





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[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by koloshor

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, CDTobie@... wrote:
>
> 
> In a message dated 3/3/07 9:17:55 AM, failedthespian@... writes:
> 
> 
> > My contention is that many organisations use WIR to give them a
level of
> > credibility that they often don't deserve.
> > 
> 
> Unfortunately very shady companies have used that same claim and
logic for 
> prefering Blue Wool over Wilhelm in the past, and the result has
been inksets 
> that were claimed to be very long-lived via the Blue Wook standard,
which were 
> extremely short-lived in reality. At least with the Wilhelm failures
we know 
> exactly what went wrong. If you are looking for legitimacy in the
inkjet market, 
> you will need to use the same types of testing the big players
(Epson, HP) 
> use, not those that the fly-by-nights (I'll avoid inserting a list
here <G>) 
> use, no matter what your personal opinions of the various test
methods may be; 
> its not yourself you need to convince.
 

Wow, arch enemies C. David Tobie and Joseph S. Wisniewski in complete
and total agreement on this one.

Ciao!

Joe

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by djon43

While I don't disagree with Steve Kale, it's important to realize that
we're about to transition into a new world of pigments and papers that
will be as wonderful in new printers as old. Todays inks/pigments
won't be sellable shortly. Entirely new standards will apply.
Wilhelm's never been fully trusted. I certainly agree that most
alternatives to Epson OEM have been problems, but I think our current
experience with MIS (specifically) proves good things are happening,
and I'm sure for various reasons that we'll be in an
order-of-magnitude better position within a year because of impending
advances in 3rd-part paper and pigment.

I do think it's silly to imagine that the opinions of professional
printers with big machines are nearly as important as the opinions of
the vast majority of skilled users, who are amateurs or active
photographers, rather than lab operators. 




--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Steve Kale
<stevekale@...> wrote:
>
> Failed Thespian
> 
> I really would encourage you to have some side by side testing done
should
> you wish your new ink set to gain some serious traction.  It generally
> doesn’t pay to fight the market, especially one as feisty as this
one.  This
> path has been well-trodden and very recently.
> 
> Regards
> 
> Steve
> 
> 
> 
> From: Paul Roark <paul.roark@...>
> Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 21:02:14 -0800
> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool
ratings
> 
>  
>  
>  
> 
> 
> > Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> > the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).
> 
> I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been
used by
> many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not
appear to
> be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet pigments.
> 
> Let me quote Lyson:
> 
> "Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading
of which
> Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out.
However, the
> test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual indoor
> display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
> (www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the
main, been
> adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
document
> 'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the
process of
> being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will
become the
> International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
> http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html
> 
> I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to
bother with
> them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give enough
> information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is not
> what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not
have the
> time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move
forward at
> the speed this industry moves.
> 
> Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool
rating of
> 7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.
 (See,
> for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast)
 This
> translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux
for 12
> hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900 megalux
> hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457 Wilhelm
> years of display.  
> 
> Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is
between
> the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
> 
> It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and
I don't
> think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter
periods, but
> long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some
inks
> does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
> "Wilhelm" year.)  
> 
> As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed
samples for
> what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the
MIS UT7
> did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3
B&W inks
> on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm
rates
> the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV
glass).
> So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor
display?  I
> don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to
that stage.
> That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick
did a
> test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up
with a
> rating of 681 years.
> 
> Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce
factors
> that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see
most of
> the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
> standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading and
> experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.
> 
> At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7
is fine,
> but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me
these new
> inks are any different than the others that are out there.
> 
> I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have something
> special.  
> 
> Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that
significant
> progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments
we use
> are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks" the
> Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the pigment
> lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their soluble
> form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of
display life?
Show quoted textHide quoted text
> 
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com 
> 
>  
>     
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by Greg

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "djon43"
<djon43@...> wrote:

> I do think it's silly to imagine that the opinions of professional
> printers with big machines are nearly as important as the opinions of
> the vast majority of skilled users, who are amateurs or active
> photographers, rather than lab operators. 
> 
> 
> 


What's silly is that if a company has an inkset that is for 7 or 8
channels, that they don't want the opinions of those people with only
6 channel printers like you mentioned earlier. It's a good thing Jon
Cone didn't think this way. It would be all to simple to remove one of
the shades to work in the 6 inks printers. Or even weed it down to 4
shades for those "ancient" 4 color printers, or maybe even an EZ set
for the newer 4 color printers.

But the truth is when testing something new you really do want the
most highly skilled operators doing the testing, else the feedback can
get kind of garbled. Once it goes mass market though, then you need
the opinions of the mass market users too. If it's technically too
challenging for the mass market, then you stand little hope of it
selling very well.

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-03 by djon43

Greg, your perspective will be of great interest to everybody once you
get your hands on the product, but smart companies impliment business
plans based upon accomplished technologies and after beta responses by
their markets. Maybe this outfit actually does have something as good
as we all know is coming shortly. 

If their market is primarily amateurs with small printers like my
2200, and if they're confident in their technology, why do they need
to query yet more experts with big machines?  

For their shareholders' sake we can hope the product's already tested
by technicians as good as you are. 
 
I suspect they've used superb outside consultants to perfect the
product and its future iterations, just as most tech companies do, but
that wouldn't guarantee success. Win some, lose some.

The issue they're now addressing evidently has to do with target
market response (they identified that market precisely for us). 

They don't need to ask what other technicians outside their target
market have to say. After that it's ultimately up to that target
market to determine if they prosper or fail. Think on Office Depot scale.

As well, Epson undoubtedly has surprises up its sleeve for that
installed base of smaller machines. New 1280 are still available from
various sources, maybe even Epson., for some reason..we know they
don't prosper primarily by printer technology, but rather by ink and
paper sales...right? I think the future's bright and fairly obvious.





--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Greg"
<dfaprinting@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "djon43"
> <djon43@> wrote:
> 
> > I do think it's silly to imagine that the opinions of professional
> > printers with big machines are nearly as important as the opinions of
> > the vast majority of skilled users, who are amateurs or active
> > photographers, rather than lab operators. 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> What's silly is that if a company has an inkset that is for 7 or 8
> channels, that they don't want the opinions of those people with only
> 6 channel printers like you mentioned earlier. It's a good thing Jon
> Cone didn't think this way. It would be all to simple to remove one of
> the shades to work in the 6 inks printers. Or even weed it down to 4
> shades for those "ancient" 4 color printers, or maybe even an EZ set
> for the newer 4 color printers.
> 
> But the truth is when testing something new you really do want the
> most highly skilled operators doing the testing, else the feedback can
> get kind of garbled. Once it goes mass market though, then you need
> the opinions of the mass market users too. If it's technically too
> challenging for the mass market, then you stand little hope of it
> selling very well.
>

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by wkm@kauaiphotos.biz

The're a few things that bother me here. Most companies don't advertise for beta testers on list forums like this and most companies beta their product BEFORE bringing it to market. The ink seems to be targeting the amatuer market based on the printers supported and the hype on the web site. Extreme savings, long life, yada yada yada. The diehard defense of the BWS and total disregard of Wihelm as a valid test is similar to the old Futures and Nanochrome defense. Either these guys don't have the money for Wilhelm testing or they don't want to see the results. Probably six of one and a half dozen of the other. They have my address but I'm not holding my breath waiting for the inks to arrive. I wonder who failed what's his name really is? Is that you John? :-)

Walt
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>-----Original Message-----
>From: djon43 [mailto:djon43@...]
>Sent: Saturday, March 3, 2007 01:20 PM
>To: DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
>Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings
>
>Greg, your perspective will be of great interest to everybody once you
>get your hands on the product, but smart companies impliment business
>plans based upon accomplished technologies and after beta responses by
>their markets. Maybe this outfit actually does have something as good
>as we all know is coming shortly. 
>
>If their market is primarily amateurs with small printers like my
>2200, and if they're confident in their technology, why do they need
>to query yet more experts with big machines?  
>
>For their shareholders' sake we can hope the product's already tested
>by technicians as good as you are. 
> 
>I suspect they've used superb outside consultants to perfect the
>product and its future iterations, just as most tech companies do, but
>that wouldn't guarantee success. Win some, lose some.
>
>The issue they're now addressing evidently has to do with target
>market response (they identified that market precisely for us). 
>
>They don't need to ask what other technicians outside their target
>market have to say. After that it's ultimately up to that target
>market to determine if they prosper or fail. Think on Office Depot scale.
>
>As well, Epson undoubtedly has surprises up its sleeve for that
>installed base of smaller machines. New 1280 are still available from
>various sources, maybe even Epson., for some reason..we know they
>don't prosper primarily by printer technology, but rather by ink and
>paper sales...right? I think the future's bright and fairly obvious.
>
>
>
>
>
>--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Greg"
><dfaprinting@...> wrote:
>>
>> --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "djon43"
>> <djon43@> wrote:
>> 
>> > I do think it's silly to imagine that the opinions of professional
>> > printers with big machines are nearly as important as the opinions of
>> > the vast majority of skilled users, who are amateurs or active
>> > photographers, rather than lab operators. 
>> > 
>> > 
>> > 
>> 
>> 
>> What's silly is that if a company has an inkset that is for 7 or 8
>> channels, that they don't want the opinions of those people with only
>> 6 channel printers like you mentioned earlier. It's a good thing Jon
>> Cone didn't think this way. It would be all to simple to remove one of
>> the shades to work in the 6 inks printers. Or even weed it down to 4
>> shades for those "ancient" 4 color printers, or maybe even an EZ set
>> for the newer 4 color printers.
>> 
>> But the truth is when testing something new you really do want the
>> most highly skilled operators doing the testing, else the feedback can
>> get kind of garbled. Once it goes mass market though, then you need
>> the opinions of the mass market users too. If it's technically too
>> challenging for the mass market, then you stand little hope of it
>> selling very well.
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>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.
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>- 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:
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> 
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by Greg

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "djon43"
<djon43@...> wrote:
>
> Greg, your perspective will be of great interest to everybody once you
> get your hands on the product,

They've already decided that I won't be getting any of this ink.
That's OK, I'll just continue moving forward with my own projects and
if I need a multi gray (6 or 7 gray) inkset I'll either make my own,
or contact Mr. Cone.

[Digital BW] image alchemy was Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by Greg

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, wkm@... wrote:
> I wonder who failed what's his name really is? Is that you John? :-)
> 


If John had a new ink like this, I would probably be able to get some
of it for testing. The image-alchemy site is registered through tucows
to the person posting these messages (Paul Banks) at an address in the UK.

They may have a problem in the USA as there is already a software
company called Image Alchemy out on the west coast.

And for the price of simple fade testing in an Atlas machine from IPI
it seems silly for companies not to pick a paper that helps their
inks, and have it tested. No one would fault an ink company for
picking the paper that gives the best results for their published
data, I know I would if I was in their shoes. Epson sure does this
with their inks, the papers that don't make the cut are left out of
the report.

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by Steve Kale

No it¹s not John (but you knew that) and let¹s not gone down that path again
- the dig was uncalled for.
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: <wkm@...>
Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Date: Sun, 04 Mar 2007 00:13:04 +0000
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

 
 
 

The're a few things that bother me here. Most companies don't advertise for
beta testers on list forums like this and most companies beta their product
BEFORE bringing it to market. The ink seems to be targeting the amatuer
market based on the printers supported and the hype on the web site. Extreme
savings, long life, yada yada yada. The diehard defense of the BWS and total
disregard of Wihelm as a valid test is similar to the old Futures and
Nanochrome defense. Either these guys don't have the money for Wilhelm
testing or they don't want to see the results. Probably six of one and a
half dozen of the other. They have my address but I'm not holding my breath
waiting for the inks to arrive. I wonder who failed what's his name really
is? Is that you John? :-)

Walt




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by Steve Kale

I agree that there’s some interesting stuff coming down the pipe (certainly
so if some of the projects that I’ve discussed recently come to fruition).
But I think the only way this sceptical bunch will be convinced is if the
new is slotted right next to the old and subjected to testing.  I don’t care
to have that testing extrapolated to longevity guestimates.  I only care
that one performed better than the other in a controlled situation that
might be halfway representative of real-life exposure (accelerated or
otherwise).  I think the key thing that will confuse everyone though is that
increasingly paper coatings and  inks are being made to work together.
(Makes sense doesn’t it?) Then a new ink on a new paper for which it was
designed may blow the pants off an old ink/paper combination but only be
so-so on the old paper.  I think it’s here that we will need to be flexible
in considering new ink and papers coming to market.

Roll-on innovation, from either big or small.  We should welcome and
encourage it with constructive comment.  And innovators also need to listen
constructively.
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: djon43 <djon43@...>
Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Date: 03 Mar 2007 13:32:33 -0800
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

 
 
 

While I don't disagree with Steve Kale, it's important to realize that
we're about to transition into a new world of pigments and papers that
will be as wonderful in new printers as old. Todays inks/pigments
won't be sellable shortly. Entirely new standards will apply.
Wilhelm's never been fully trusted. I certainly agree that most
alternatives to Epson OEM have been problems, but I think our current
experience with MIS (specifically) proves good things are happening,
and I'm sure for various reasons that we'll be in an
order-of-magnitude better position within a year because of impending
advances in 3rd-part paper and pigment.

I do think it's silly to imagine that the opinions of professional
printers with big machines are nearly as important as the opinions of
the vast majority of skilled users, who are amateurs or active
photographers, rather than lab operators.

--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@...m
<mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> , Steve Kale
<stevekale@...> wrote:
>
> Failed Thespian
> 
> I really would encourage you to have some side by side testing done
should
> you wish your new ink set to gain some serious traction.  It generally
> doesn’t pay to fight the market, especially one as feisty as this
one.  This
> path has been well-trodden and very recently.
> 
> Regards
> 
> Steve
> 
> 
> 
> From: Paul Roark <paul.roark@...>
> Reply-To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> >
> Date: Fri, 02 Mar 2007 21:02:14 -0800
> To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com
<mailto:DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint%40yahoogroups.com> >
> Subject: RE: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool
ratings
> 
>  
>  
>  
> 
> 
> > Our inks are tested to an internationally accepted standard
> > the Blue Wool Scale (BWS).
> 
> I just want to comment a bit on the Blue Wool standard.  It has been
used by
> many industries for quite a while, but the Blue Wool test does not
appear to
> be the internationally accepted standard for photos or inkjet pigments.
> 
> Let me quote Lyson:
> 
> "Lyson has a number of methods for observing pictorial image fading
of which
> Blue Wool and simple window placement are still carried out.
However, the
> test that we believe gives the most accurate prediction of actual indoor
> display life is the method used by Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc
> (www.wilhelm-research.com). The Wilhelm test criteria has, in the
main, been
> adopted into the 1996 ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
document
> 'Stability of Colour Pictorial Images', which itself is in the
process of
> being furthered into an ISO standard. By definition, this will
become the
> International test that our industry should orientate itself to."
> http://www.nazdar.com/Lyson/lyson-longevity.html
> 
> I actually have the Blue Wool test materials and decided not to
bother with
> them.  I'm not saying they are not relevant, but they do not give enough
> information to distinguish the inks, and testing to the end stage is not
> what I'm most interested in and is not practical for me.  I do not
have the
> time to do that for enough inks and papers to allow me to move
forward at
> the speed this industry moves.
> 
> Let's look at some actual numbers and equivalences.  The Blue Wool
rating of
> 7 is 300 megalux hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.
 (See,
> for example, http://www.handprint.com/HP/WCL/pigmt6.html#lightfast)
 This
> translates into 152 Wilhelm years of display.  (Wilhelm uses 450 lux
for 12
> hours per day.)  The Blue Wool rating of 8 (the highest) is 900 megalux
> hours of exposure before fading becomes noticeable.  This is 457 Wilhelm
> years of display.
> 
> Most of the action with respect to the pigments I'm working with is
between
> the BW 7 and 8 ratings.  That is rather large gap -- from 152 to 457
Wilhelm
> years of display.
> 
> It also would simply take me too long to test to the end points, and
I don't
> think that is my main interest anyway.  So, I test for shorter
periods, but
> long enough that the initial high non-linearity I've found with some
inks
> does not overwhelm the final results.  (Most of this is in the first
> "Wilhelm" year.) 
> 
> As an example, in one test a bit more than a year ago, I exposed
samples for
> what would be the equivalent of 13 Wilhelm years.  In this test the
MIS UT7
> did 2.8 times better (looking at the change in Lab L) than the K3
B&W inks
> on Premier Art Hot Press (the same coating as UltraSmooth).  Wilhelm
rates
> the K3 B&W inks at ">205" years on UltraSmooth under glass (not UV
glass).
> So, could the UT7 inks really "last" 574 years in typical indoor
display?  I
> don't know, and I'm not going to do the testing needed to get to
that stage.
> That would, by the way, be a Blue Wool rating of 8.  In fact, Livick
did a
> test on coated UT inks all the way out to the end point.  He came up
with a
> rating of 681 years.
> 
> Any accelerated test is subject to criticism.  They all introduce
factors
> that might skew the results one way or the other.  But when I see
most of
> the industry going to Wilhelm, that makes his procedures the de facto
> standards regardless of their merits.  In fact, however, my reading and
> experience suggests Wilhelm is the best there is.
> 
> At any rate, I simply want to point out that Blue Wool rating of 7
is fine,
> but it does not tell me what I'm looking for.  It does not tell me
these new
> inks are any different than the others that are out there.
> 
> I'd love to see a comparative test. I really hope you do have something
> special.  
> 
> Epson's Claria "dye" inks demonstrate rather convincingly that
significant
> progress is possible and perhaps likely in this field.  The pigments
we use
> are called "dye stacks."  I wonder what happens when Epson "stacks" the
> Claria dyes?  Would there be a huge (like 4x) improvement in the pigment
> lightfastness the way there appears to be for the dyes in their soluble
> form?  Would we be looking at color prints with "800 years" of
display life?
> 
> Paul
> www.PaulRoark.com
> 
>  
>     
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

 
    



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-04 by Ernst Dinkla

To refresh what Fotonic actually achieved in the WIR test of 1999:

http://www.inkjetart.com/news/Wilhelm102999.pdf

and there were never end of test results published as promised 
in that PDF. I think Lyson wasn't interested in testing by WIR 
after the first results.


Maybe the right numbers to set the new quad ink against are 
the HP Z3100 B&W test results available on  the WIR site.


Met vriendelijke groeten,  Ernst


|  Dinkla Grafische Techniek  |
|     www.pigment-print.com    |
|             ( unvollendet )            |

Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by Brian Ellis

"Are you guys still pissing? It has been days"

Apparently there's a urinary tract infection going around. All the guy asks 
for is some people willing to do a beta test, which one would think could 
have been answered with a simple "yes," "no," or "maybe" with questions  by 
private email. Instead  he gets days and days of grief about everything from 
his failure to supply a printer with which to conduct the tests to his 
testing methodology to his product. That will certainly teach any future 
seller of a new product to stay as far away from here as possible.
Show quoted textHide quoted text
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mark Savoia" <mark@...>
To: <DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 9:14 AM
Subject: Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings


Are you guys still pissing? It has been days.
Mark

On Mar 5, 2007, at 9:07 AM, CDTobie@... wrote:

>
> In a message dated 3/3/07 9:40:41 AM, failedthespian@...
> writes:
>
>
>> Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot comment again
>> concerning
>> this matter.
>>
>
> What you can expect at PMA is more of what you are hearing here. So
> your best
> preparation for the show is learning what your market will expect in
> advance...
>
> C. David Tobie
> Product Technology Manager
> ColorVision Business Unit
> Datacolor Inc.
> CDTobie@...
> www.colorvision.com
>
>
> **************************************
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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by CDTobie@aol.com

In a message dated 3/3/07 9:40:41 AM, failedthespian@... writes:


> Paul, Regarding you comments and dismissal of the Blue Wool Test, you
> are out of step with virtually every major organisation involved with
> testing colour materials for fading.
> 

Materials; meaning fabrics and textiles. Thats the world the Blue Wool test 
is designed for. We are talking inkjet fading testing here, and for that 
Wilhelm or similar test methods are the standard. Even if you disagree, you will be 
find you are swimming against the current trying to get Blue Wool tests 
accepted for photo print longevity ESPECIALLY in the US. If your were convinced that 
metric offered the right units for sizing paper, but your customers insisted 
on purchasimg paper cut to standard sizes, would you lecture them on the 
superiority of metric, or would you provide the sizes they requested? You are 
hearing loud and clear that your customers don't want, don't trust, don't 
understand, and don't believe in, Blue Wool testing. Using it and insisting on it 
groups you, in user's perceptions, with the industry's con-artists, not its 
legitmate citizens.

C. David Tobie
Product Technology Manager
ColorVision Business Unit
Datacolor Inc.
CDTobie@...
www.colorvision.com


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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by CDTobie@aol.com

In a message dated 3/3/07 9:40:41 AM, failedthespian@... writes:


> Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot comment again concerning
> this matter.
> 

What you can expect at PMA is more of what you are hearing here. So your best 
preparation for the show is learning what your market will expect in 
advance... 

C. David Tobie
Product Technology Manager
ColorVision Business Unit
Datacolor Inc.
CDTobie@...
www.colorvision.com


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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by Mark Savoia

Are you guys still pissing? It has been days.
Mark
Show quoted textHide quoted text
On Mar 5, 2007, at 9:07 AM, CDTobie@... wrote:

>
> In a message dated 3/3/07 9:40:41 AM, failedthespian@...  
> writes:
>
>
>> Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot comment again  
>> concerning
>> this matter.
>>
>
> What you can expect at PMA is more of what you are hearing here. So  
> your best
> preparation for the show is learning what your market will expect in
> advance...
>
> C. David Tobie
> Product Technology Manager
> ColorVision Business Unit
> Datacolor Inc.
> CDTobie@...
> www.colorvision.com
>
>
> **************************************
>  AOL now offers free
> email to everyone.  Find out more about what's free from AOL at
> http://www.aol.com.
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by CDTobie@aol.com

In a message dated 3/3/07 1:56:35 PM, koloshor@... writes:


> Wow, arch enemies C. David Tobie and Joseph S. Wisniewski in complete
> and total agreement on this one.
> 
> I have yet to find a person with whom I disagree on everything...

C. David Tobie
Product Technology Manager
ColorVision Business Unit
Datacolor Inc.
CDTobie@...
www.colorvision.com


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Re: [Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by gilbert Draper

ENOUGH ALREADY!
GD
--- Mark Savoia <mark@...> wrote:

> Are you guys still pissing? It has been days.
> Mark
> 
> On Mar 5, 2007, at 9:07 AM, CDTobie@... wrote:
> 
> >
> > In a message dated 3/3/07 9:40:41 AM,
> failedthespian@...  
> > writes:
> >
> >
> >> Anyway, I need to prepare for PMA, so I cannot
> comment again  
> >> concerning
> >> this matter.
> >>
> >
> > What you can expect at PMA is more of what you are
> hearing here. So  
> > your best
> > preparation for the show is learning what your
> market will expect in
> > advance...
> >
> > C. David Tobie
> > Product Technology Manager
> > ColorVision Business Unit
> > Datacolor Inc.
> > CDTobie@...
> > www.colorvision.com
> >
> >
> > **************************************
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=== message truncated ===


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[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by Clayton Jones

Hello Mark,

>Are you guys still pissing? It has been days.

Actually I have found this thread to be very interesting and
informative.  The points of view still emerging from it continue to
illuminate the issue for me, and I am also thinking of the many
lurkers among our 8600 members, many of them new or relatively new,
who may know nothing about the past history of the "ink wars".

For example, C. David's last sentence...

"Using it and insisting on it groups you, in user's perceptions, with
the industry's con-artists, not its legitmate citizens."

...I believe is important because it openly states that there are con
artists out there in the industry.  Those of us who have been around
for awhile know that to be true (beware of people offering "advance
secrets" of new miracle technologies about to emerge).

I think this thread will die down of it's own accord, and I don't have
the sense that it's one of those out of control threads that can't end
itself.  My own feeling is that it has provided a valuable service.  

We all now have a background from which to watch how this new Dark Art
ink emerges and fares in the marketplace.  I would be delighted to see
a new ink that produces better matte paper dmax, has greater
longevity, doesn't clog and doesn't settle out.  But I won't accept
advertising hype and claims.  I'll be watching for actual user reports.


Regards,
Clayton


Info on black and white digital printing at    
http://www.cjcom.net/digiprnarts.htm

[Digital BW] Re: New graduated black inks -Blue wool ratings

2007-03-05 by dlruckus

My sentiments also Clayton.

Regards
Duane



--- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Clayton Jones"
<cj@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Hello Mark,
> 
> >Are you guys still pissing? It has been days.
> 
> Actually I have found this thread to be very interesting and
> informative.  The points of view still emerging from it continue to
> illuminate the issue for me, and I am also thinking of the many
> lurkers among our 8600 members, many of them new or relatively new,
> who may know nothing about the past history of the "ink wars".
> 
> For example, C. David's last sentence...
> 
> "Using it and insisting on it groups you, in user's perceptions, with
> the industry's con-artists, not its legitmate citizens."
> 
> ...I believe is important because it openly states that there are con
> artists out there in the industry.  Those of us who have been around
> for awhile know that to be true (beware of people offering "advance
> secrets" of new miracle technologies about to emerge).
> 
> I think this thread will die down of it's own accord, and I don't have
> the sense that it's one of those out of control threads that can't end
> itself.  My own feeling is that it has provided a valuable service.  
> 
> We all now have a background from which to watch how this new Dark Art
> ink emerges and fares in the marketplace.  I would be delighted to see
> a new ink that produces better matte paper dmax, has greater
> longevity, doesn't clog and doesn't settle out.  But I won't accept
> advertising hype and claims.  I'll be watching for actual user reports.
> 
> 
> Regards,
> Clayton
> 
> 
> Info on black and white digital printing at    
> http://www.cjcom.net/digiprnarts.htm
>

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