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-
This is perhaps just a "What say you?" posting.
Back in the wet darkroom, there was a lot of consistency about paper surface descriptions. Since Kodak was the 800 pound gorilla in the red safe light lit darkroom, they defined paper surfaces. They were all given a letter designation, the most famous being F. Glossy. There was a huge alphabet soup of surfaces in the 1940's and 1950's. Glossy, semi-matte N (loved that one, probably similar to Canon Luster), many more.
So today it's a free for all. Sure, we can all get behind Glossy, granted there is better and worse. Gloss. Pearl, tip of the hat to Ilford for the last fifty years, a bit less than Gloss, heavily textured. Then we run into Lustre/Luster, sometimes like Pearl, sometimes like that N.
Tomorrow I'll dredge out my ancient Kodak paper sampling book. I shall update this post. But in the interim, I'll posit that on the scale of Gloss to Matte, they should arrange themselves something like this:
Glossy
Pearl
Luster, as with Arista II/Premier
Semi-Gloss
Canon Luster
Matte
Of course, if you spray or laminate, it becomes rather moot, doesn't it?
What say you?
Back in the wet darkroom, there was a lot of consistency about paper surface descriptions. Since Kodak was the 800 pound gorilla in the red safe light lit darkroom, they defined paper surfaces. They were all given a letter designation, the most famous being F. Glossy. There was a huge alphabet soup of surfaces in the 1940's and 1950's. Glossy, semi-matte N (loved that one, probably similar to Canon Luster), many more.
So today it's a free for all. Sure, we can all get behind Glossy, granted there is better and worse. Gloss. Pearl, tip of the hat to Ilford for the last fifty years, a bit less than Gloss, heavily textured. Then we run into Lustre/Luster, sometimes like Pearl, sometimes like that N.
Tomorrow I'll dredge out my ancient Kodak paper sampling book. I shall update this post. But in the interim, I'll posit that on the scale of Gloss to Matte, they should arrange themselves something like this:
Glossy
Pearl
Luster, as with Arista II/Premier
Semi-Gloss
Canon Luster
Matte
Of course, if you spray or laminate, it becomes rather moot, doesn't it?
What say you?