x64
Newbie to Printing
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2025
- Messages
- 7
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 8
- Printer Model
- Epson Stylus R2400 / 2100
Good day everyone,
I have some questions regarding vertical waving of certain papers (in this case A4) with graphical art printed with my Epson Stylus 2100. I found the art in question an interesting case, because it has quite a big surface area of just yellow, cyan, magenta, dark blue and red. The latter area's causing the most intense waving in a vertical pattern with around 25mm between the waves. I've been trying a lot of different (cheap) CC papers that all cause this to happen, both with matte and gloss. The only non-waving results I had were with the Sihl glossy papers, that only caused ink pooling and bleed at higher densities, but no waving. Today I purchased some more 'premium' original Epson Archival Matte paper, and to my horror it came out just as wavy as the cheapest papers I experimented with.
It is clear to me that there is some kind of absorption issue with the papers, but what's breaking my head is that I initially started printed this artwork with some (+10yo unknown make) matte paper with a lower weight (below 170) that my dad once gave me, that printed out perfectly free of waves! Knowing him that definitely wasn't very premium or expensive, but almost definitely purchased in Germany at some computer fair. I've ran out and in search of a substitute I cannot seem to find one that prints comparably.
It is also important to note that I'm printing with dye inks instead of the original pigment inks, through Gutenprint on Linux. If I didn't have those wave-free results with the Sihl and unknown matte paper with the same parameters, I'd think the dye ink would be the cause. I've been experimenting with the general ink limit and density, but so far could not find a sweet spot between the absence of waves and correctly saturated colors. I've also noticed less waves when printing below 1440dpi.
I'm hoping someone more experienced could point me in a direction for some further reading or maybe I'm missing something obvious, before wasting even more paper and ink.
Regards,
x64
I have some questions regarding vertical waving of certain papers (in this case A4) with graphical art printed with my Epson Stylus 2100. I found the art in question an interesting case, because it has quite a big surface area of just yellow, cyan, magenta, dark blue and red. The latter area's causing the most intense waving in a vertical pattern with around 25mm between the waves. I've been trying a lot of different (cheap) CC papers that all cause this to happen, both with matte and gloss. The only non-waving results I had were with the Sihl glossy papers, that only caused ink pooling and bleed at higher densities, but no waving. Today I purchased some more 'premium' original Epson Archival Matte paper, and to my horror it came out just as wavy as the cheapest papers I experimented with.
It is clear to me that there is some kind of absorption issue with the papers, but what's breaking my head is that I initially started printed this artwork with some (+10yo unknown make) matte paper with a lower weight (below 170) that my dad once gave me, that printed out perfectly free of waves! Knowing him that definitely wasn't very premium or expensive, but almost definitely purchased in Germany at some computer fair. I've ran out and in search of a substitute I cannot seem to find one that prints comparably.
It is also important to note that I'm printing with dye inks instead of the original pigment inks, through Gutenprint on Linux. If I didn't have those wave-free results with the Sihl and unknown matte paper with the same parameters, I'd think the dye ink would be the cause. I've been experimenting with the general ink limit and density, but so far could not find a sweet spot between the absence of waves and correctly saturated colors. I've also noticed less waves when printing below 1440dpi.
I'm hoping someone more experienced could point me in a direction for some further reading or maybe I'm missing something obvious, before wasting even more paper and ink.
Regards,
x64