crenedecotret
Print Addict
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2006
- Messages
- 161
- Reaction score
- 52
- Points
- 163
Hi everyone, I recently had an interesting discussion with TheHat regarding what types of paper he uses for photos and other material and one of the hints he gave me was to look in the direction of papers destined to the digital printing business. Where I live these types of paper are extremely difficult to obtain. I have a contact with a major office supply store here in Montreal, Canada but they don't carry any of these papers, and have a very very limited selection of laser papers. I was able to obtain two samples from a paper company that is somewhat well known and established in my province. The papers are Rolland Enviro 100, in satin and smooth/gloss finish.
The papers are interesting in the sense that there are a lot of visible fibers in it, which can adds a bit of a texture and feel to the paper. The first thing I did was try different media settings in the print driver to see which laid down an appropriate amount of ink. I then proceeded to create profile with Argyll and a colorminki. I am using a Canon IP4500 printer.
I had interesting results. I thought the paper would be somewhat close to Epson matte paper. It isnt. While the paper has no problem handling high resolution prints, the gamut is a bit limited. I ended up with very precise prints, but that had no "pop" in color. Here is a quick test with the "iccgamut" command that is supplied with Argyll
Epson Premium Presentation Paper Matte: Total volume of gamut is 473767 cubic colorspace units
Rolland Digital Enviro 100 Smooth: Total volume of gamut is 219247 cubic colorspace units
For comparaison, a plain paper profile: Total volume of gamut is 163228 cubic colorspace units
as you can see there is a huge jump with the Epson Matte paper....
So this pretty much sets is half way between a Matte photo paper and plain paper. On my Canon printer, it's about as good as a quality card stock. I would not be buying this paper for printing photographs with a matte finish but I can see it being an excellent paper for DVD covers, prints for my son's homework if a few pictures are required, maybe even flyers/handouts.
I promised The Hat I would share my results, hence this post. Even if this paper was not "the one", I plan to keep trying to find samples of some of these and keep testing. I found a thread here where these types of papers are discussed a bit (http://www.nifty-stuff.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=61928). The thread mostly discussed Canon 9000 vs 9000 mk2 but some of these laser/digital papers were discussed. Xerox igen3 paper seems to have gotten an honorable mention. The Hat also mention good results with laid papers.
I'm now trying to source some Domtar Cougar paper, which is another brand than is well known here in Canada (I think it's sold worldwide).
Is anyone else interested in testing different laser papers to see what kind of results we can get with inkjet printers? It could be great eventually having some sort of database. We all save money with third party, why not on paper? I'm sure there is something out there that can match Epson or Canon matte papers with a better price tag (on volume... thinking 1000 sheets or more)
The papers are interesting in the sense that there are a lot of visible fibers in it, which can adds a bit of a texture and feel to the paper. The first thing I did was try different media settings in the print driver to see which laid down an appropriate amount of ink. I then proceeded to create profile with Argyll and a colorminki. I am using a Canon IP4500 printer.
I had interesting results. I thought the paper would be somewhat close to Epson matte paper. It isnt. While the paper has no problem handling high resolution prints, the gamut is a bit limited. I ended up with very precise prints, but that had no "pop" in color. Here is a quick test with the "iccgamut" command that is supplied with Argyll
Epson Premium Presentation Paper Matte: Total volume of gamut is 473767 cubic colorspace units
Rolland Digital Enviro 100 Smooth: Total volume of gamut is 219247 cubic colorspace units
For comparaison, a plain paper profile: Total volume of gamut is 163228 cubic colorspace units
as you can see there is a huge jump with the Epson Matte paper....
So this pretty much sets is half way between a Matte photo paper and plain paper. On my Canon printer, it's about as good as a quality card stock. I would not be buying this paper for printing photographs with a matte finish but I can see it being an excellent paper for DVD covers, prints for my son's homework if a few pictures are required, maybe even flyers/handouts.
I promised The Hat I would share my results, hence this post. Even if this paper was not "the one", I plan to keep trying to find samples of some of these and keep testing. I found a thread here where these types of papers are discussed a bit (http://www.nifty-stuff.com/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=61928). The thread mostly discussed Canon 9000 vs 9000 mk2 but some of these laser/digital papers were discussed. Xerox igen3 paper seems to have gotten an honorable mention. The Hat also mention good results with laid papers.
I'm now trying to source some Domtar Cougar paper, which is another brand than is well known here in Canada (I think it's sold worldwide).
Is anyone else interested in testing different laser papers to see what kind of results we can get with inkjet printers? It could be great eventually having some sort of database. We all save money with third party, why not on paper? I'm sure there is something out there that can match Epson or Canon matte papers with a better price tag (on volume... thinking 1000 sheets or more)