Yahoo Groups archive

QTR-Quadtone RIP

Index last updated: 2026-04-28 23:12 UTC

Thread

Wants to re-utilize an Epson 7500

Wants to re-utilize an Epson 7500

2008-07-10 by kentartphoto

Hi gang,

 I just joined and started reading some of the postings this weekend.
 I've been a professional photographer for over twenty years and have
been printing on Epson's Gemini 1 (Epson 5500's) and now Gemini 2
system with (2) Epson 4000 printers for years. (Not that that matters)
 
I have an original Epson 7500 printer that I bought like 8 years ago.
 I think I might be on my "third" set of cartridges.  The printer is
in great shape with very little use.  I mostly printed a few banners
and some portraits on it, but I wasn't pleased with the skin-tones. 


Rather than eBay it, I want to do more "fine-art" B&W printing on some
of the really nice papers. I've already downloaded the Quadtone RIP
software and been reading a bit.  I'll be happy to pay the $50 as soon
as I get it printing.


Is it worth converting to Quadtones?

Should I use the Epson inks with the RIP or go ahead and get the K6 inks?

If so, do I need to make a decision on which set to get:  Selinium,
Sepia, SplitTone or Neutral?  I tend to like a slightly warm print.

Where's a good place to buy?  I see them on Inkjet Mall. or can I buy
them direct?

I saw where the image needs to be a Tiff file.  Does it also need to
be greyscale before printing or leave it in RGB?

I'll be printing on a backup G4 mac (accelerated) with OSX Tiger
probably using my older version Photoshop CS.  Epson doesn't make a
current set of drivers for this printer and OSX that I've found.  I
found it prints best in Classic OS9 with PS 7.  I guess the QT RIP
software will fix this dilemma.
 
Do I really need the $400 flushing cartridges?

One last thing,  I also have an Epson 1270.  Should I look into
converting it also.  I thought I'd get the 7500 running and then there
would be no need unless I wanted to print small stuff - postcards, etc.

 - OR, just sell'em and go buy an Epson 7880 or 9880.

Excellent article in AfterCapture Magazine.  Thats what fired up my
interest again.  I been reading a little over the years now its time
to do something.

Thanks for your help!  Sorry for the length and all the questions.  If
you knew how slow I type...

Ken

P.S. Any favorite settings and paper combinations would help.

Re: Wants to re-utilize an Epson 7500

2008-07-11 by Chuck Behrman

I've been using my 7500 on OS 10.5 with QTR and the Neutral K6 for over a year and love 
it.

You will need the cleaning carts and inkjetmall.com is the direct sales division.

I am looking forward to a warm-neutral inkset similar to the old Piezography inks that I 
was using on a 3000.

Good luck -- CB




--- In QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com, "kentartphoto" <kentartphoto@...> wrote:
Show quoted textHide quoted text
>
> Hi gang,
> 
>  I just joined and started reading some of the postings this weekend.
>  I've been a professional photographer for over twenty years and have
> been printing on Epson's Gemini 1 (Epson 5500's) and now Gemini 2
> system with (2) Epson 4000 printers for years. (Not that that matters)
>  
> I have an original Epson 7500 printer that I bought like 8 years ago.
>  I think I might be on my "third" set of cartridges.  The printer is
> in great shape with very little use.  I mostly printed a few banners
> and some portraits on it, but I wasn't pleased with the skin-tones. 
> 
> 
> Rather than eBay it, I want to do more "fine-art" B&W printing on some
> of the really nice papers. I've already downloaded the Quadtone RIP
> software and been reading a bit.  I'll be happy to pay the $50 as soon
> as I get it printing.
> 
> 
> Is it worth converting to Quadtones?
> 
> Should I use the Epson inks with the RIP or go ahead and get the K6 inks?
> 
> If so, do I need to make a decision on which set to get:  Selinium,
> Sepia, SplitTone or Neutral?  I tend to like a slightly warm print.
> 
> Where's a good place to buy?  I see them on Inkjet Mall. or can I buy
> them direct?
> 
> I saw where the image needs to be a Tiff file.  Does it also need to
> be greyscale before printing or leave it in RGB?
> 
> I'll be printing on a backup G4 mac (accelerated) with OSX Tiger
> probably using my older version Photoshop CS.  Epson doesn't make a
> current set of drivers for this printer and OSX that I've found.  I
> found it prints best in Classic OS9 with PS 7.  I guess the QT RIP
> software will fix this dilemma.
>  
> Do I really need the $400 flushing cartridges?
> 
> One last thing,  I also have an Epson 1270.  Should I look into
> converting it also.  I thought I'd get the 7500 running and then there
> would be no need unless I wanted to print small stuff - postcards, etc.
> 
>  - OR, just sell'em and go buy an Epson 7880 or 9880.
> 
> Excellent article in AfterCapture Magazine.  Thats what fired up my
> interest again.  I been reading a little over the years now its time
> to do something.
> 
> Thanks for your help!  Sorry for the length and all the questions.  If
> you knew how slow I type...
> 
> Ken
> 
> P.S. Any favorite settings and paper combinations would help.
>

RE: [QuadtoneRIP] Wants to re-utilize an Epson 7500

2008-07-14 by Paul Roark

I use a 7500 for all my large B&W printing, using the Eboni-6 inkset
(http://www.paulroark.com/BW-Info/Monitor-Profiling.htm).  The open source
Carbon-6 (http://www.paulroark.com/BW-Info/Ink-Mixing.pdf ) would work in a
similar fashion.  I'm sure Jon's inks will also make fine prints with a
7500.  With the very light inks it remains I good old workhorse.

 

Paul

www.PaulRoark.com <http://www.paulroark.com/>  

 

 

  _____  
Show quoted textHide quoted text
From: QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com [mailto:QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of kentartphoto
Sent: Wednesday, July 09, 2008 8:56 PM
To: QuadtoneRIP@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [QuadtoneRIP] Wants to re-utilize an Epson 7500

 

Hi gang,

I just joined and started reading some of the postings this weekend.
I've been a professional photographer for over twenty years and have
been printing on Epson's Gemini 1 (Epson 5500's) and now Gemini 2
system with (2) Epson 4000 printers for years. (Not that that matters)

I have an original Epson 7500 printer that I bought like 8 years ago.
I think I might be on my "third" set of cartridges. The printer is
in great shape with very little use. I mostly printed a few banners
and some portraits on it, but I wasn't pleased with the skin-tones. 

Rather than eBay it, I want to do more "fine-art" B&W printing on some
of the really nice papers. I've already downloaded the Quadtone RIP
software and been reading a bit. I'll be happy to pay the $50 as soon
as I get it printing.

Is it worth converting to Quadtones?

Should I use the Epson inks with the RIP or go ahead and get the K6 inks?

If so, do I need to make a decision on which set to get: Selinium,
Sepia, SplitTone or Neutral? I tend to like a slightly warm print.

Where's a good place to buy? I see them on Inkjet Mall. or can I buy
them direct?

I saw where the image needs to be a Tiff file. Does it also need to
be greyscale before printing or leave it in RGB?

I'll be printing on a backup G4 mac (accelerated) with OSX Tiger
probably using my older version Photoshop CS. Epson doesn't make a
current set of drivers for this printer and OSX that I've found. I
found it prints best in Classic OS9 with PS 7. I guess the QT RIP
software will fix this dilemma.

Do I really need the $400 flushing cartridges?

One last thing, I also have an Epson 1270. Should I look into
converting it also. I thought I'd get the 7500 running and then there
would be no need unless I wanted to print small stuff - postcards, etc.

- OR, just sell'em and go buy an Epson 7880 or 9880.

Excellent article in AfterCapture Magazine. Thats what fired up my
interest again. I been reading a little over the years now its time
to do something.

Thanks for your help! Sorry for the length and all the questions. If
you knew how slow I type...

Ken

P.S. Any favorite settings and paper combinations would help.

 



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

Move to quarantaine

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