Paul Verizzo
Print Addict
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2011
- Messages
- 427
- Reaction score
- 88
- Points
- 173
- Location
- Sarasota, FL, USA
- Printer Model
- Canon ip4500, 9000 MK II, PRO-
What I did:
Using a sheet of Ilford Smooth Pearl, I printed an image with a Canon Pro9000 MK II using all (almost all?) OEM ChromaLife 100 inks. Mostly green and red to the eye, but a color histogram shows that there is actually a lot of blue within.
I then flipped it and ran it through a Canon PRO-100 with OEM ChromaLife 100+ inks.
I placed a black opaque heavy paper barrier down the middle, held in place by clear packaging tape at four end points. Presumably PET Mylar. Also two middle points with Scotch cello tape. No further protection was given.
Placed it on my SW window getting about eight hours a day of bright Florida winter light. Mostly direct sunlight, some cloudy weather here or there.
After a month, the difference between the two inks is obvious. I’d rate the “+” about twice as light and gas fast as the original. Ball park eyeball.
I cut the paper in two, flipped one end to match the other, and scanned it. I marked where the opaque mask was and the clear tapes.
What was very interesting is that the image portions under the mylar tape faded far less than the open areas! Unless the cello tape is very gas porous, this would indicate that the mylar has some significant degree of UV filtering. I removed some of the adhesive which got left behind and it did not change the coloring.
I am also seeing something like this, even more so with an image under regular Saran type food wrap, which is LDPE.
(Ignore the light pink stipe on the right side. Scanner defect.)
OK, how do I get an image inserted and displayed? I put the image URL in the little box that pops up when I select "Image," this is all I get.
Using a sheet of Ilford Smooth Pearl, I printed an image with a Canon Pro9000 MK II using all (almost all?) OEM ChromaLife 100 inks. Mostly green and red to the eye, but a color histogram shows that there is actually a lot of blue within.
I then flipped it and ran it through a Canon PRO-100 with OEM ChromaLife 100+ inks.
I placed a black opaque heavy paper barrier down the middle, held in place by clear packaging tape at four end points. Presumably PET Mylar. Also two middle points with Scotch cello tape. No further protection was given.
Placed it on my SW window getting about eight hours a day of bright Florida winter light. Mostly direct sunlight, some cloudy weather here or there.
After a month, the difference between the two inks is obvious. I’d rate the “+” about twice as light and gas fast as the original. Ball park eyeball.
I cut the paper in two, flipped one end to match the other, and scanned it. I marked where the opaque mask was and the clear tapes.
What was very interesting is that the image portions under the mylar tape faded far less than the open areas! Unless the cello tape is very gas porous, this would indicate that the mylar has some significant degree of UV filtering. I removed some of the adhesive which got left behind and it did not change the coloring.
I am also seeing something like this, even more so with an image under regular Saran type food wrap, which is LDPE.
(Ignore the light pink stipe on the right side. Scanner defect.)
OK, how do I get an image inserted and displayed? I put the image URL in the little box that pops up when I select "Image," this is all I get.
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