nrdlnd
Fan of Printing
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2015
- Messages
- 74
- Reaction score
- 31
- Points
- 63
- Printer Model
- Epson Stylus Pro 3880
Hi,
I'm new to printing but I'm trying to learn with a rather fast pace. First selecting papers. There are a lot of good papers to print on. The more affordable papers ar the RC-papers. Everyone of them contain a lot of OBA (optical brightening agents) or FWA (fluorescent whitening agents). The less affordable papers (or more expensive) the so called "Fine Art" papers do or do not contain these whitening chemicals. These chemicals are made by big and well known companies such as Dow Chemicals and CIBA. They are made with highly toxical substances but there isn't well known how toxic the end products are especially for the environment. They exist all around in for example toilet paper (not all), office papers and in photographic material (and have been used even during the black&white era in photographic papers). There function is to reflect unvisible UV-light to visible blue light that makes the paper to look whiter.
What have been discussed about OBA/FWA is about the longevity of a print. There seems to be no easy answer about that as som RC-prints have a good longevity. RC-papers have always OBA. It could be that the RC-coating protects from the environment. I leave this question about the longevity behind.
If I want to be a more advanced printer and also use third party inks I think there is a necessity to learn to profile papers. One of the most advanced programs for doing this is Argyll CMS. For this you need a good spectrophotometer even if I think some colorimeters are useable to some degree. Some of the meters have a so called UV-cut filter some not. The Colormunki has UV-cut the i1 Pro can be with or without and the i1 Pro2 I think can be both. When you profile a paper the UV-cut meters will give a fixed degree of compensation for the OBA in the paper but not for different amount of OBA:s. They will not give correct readings for non-OBA papers. The meters without OBA-cut filters will give correct readings for papers without OBA but may need correction in software for OBA-papers. The big problem is that the correction for an OBA-paper can only be done for a certain viewing condition to give a correct color rendition (for example the standardized D50) and it must be different for different amounts of OBA in the papers.
With all these knowledge of the problems with OBA:s in photographic papers I think there should be an absolut no to it's use in photography especially when you want to deal with correct colour under different viewing conditions. Why? Because the colours look different under different colour temperatures. OBA-papers can only be corrected to look correct in one defined colour temperature. The eye can adapt but not in this case as the rendition is corrupted.
After this rather long back ground writing I want to ask if you people completely avoid these papers containing OBA (I know they shouldn't exist but for only very specialized uses) or how do you deal with them? How do you use FWA-compensation in ArgylCMS?
Per
I'm new to printing but I'm trying to learn with a rather fast pace. First selecting papers. There are a lot of good papers to print on. The more affordable papers ar the RC-papers. Everyone of them contain a lot of OBA (optical brightening agents) or FWA (fluorescent whitening agents). The less affordable papers (or more expensive) the so called "Fine Art" papers do or do not contain these whitening chemicals. These chemicals are made by big and well known companies such as Dow Chemicals and CIBA. They are made with highly toxical substances but there isn't well known how toxic the end products are especially for the environment. They exist all around in for example toilet paper (not all), office papers and in photographic material (and have been used even during the black&white era in photographic papers). There function is to reflect unvisible UV-light to visible blue light that makes the paper to look whiter.
What have been discussed about OBA/FWA is about the longevity of a print. There seems to be no easy answer about that as som RC-prints have a good longevity. RC-papers have always OBA. It could be that the RC-coating protects from the environment. I leave this question about the longevity behind.
If I want to be a more advanced printer and also use third party inks I think there is a necessity to learn to profile papers. One of the most advanced programs for doing this is Argyll CMS. For this you need a good spectrophotometer even if I think some colorimeters are useable to some degree. Some of the meters have a so called UV-cut filter some not. The Colormunki has UV-cut the i1 Pro can be with or without and the i1 Pro2 I think can be both. When you profile a paper the UV-cut meters will give a fixed degree of compensation for the OBA in the paper but not for different amount of OBA:s. They will not give correct readings for non-OBA papers. The meters without OBA-cut filters will give correct readings for papers without OBA but may need correction in software for OBA-papers. The big problem is that the correction for an OBA-paper can only be done for a certain viewing condition to give a correct color rendition (for example the standardized D50) and it must be different for different amounts of OBA in the papers.
With all these knowledge of the problems with OBA:s in photographic papers I think there should be an absolut no to it's use in photography especially when you want to deal with correct colour under different viewing conditions. Why? Because the colours look different under different colour temperatures. OBA-papers can only be corrected to look correct in one defined colour temperature. The eye can adapt but not in this case as the rendition is corrupted.
After this rather long back ground writing I want to ask if you people completely avoid these papers containing OBA (I know they shouldn't exist but for only very specialized uses) or how do you deal with them? How do you use FWA-compensation in ArgylCMS?
Per