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-
Remember back in the day of film, the popular photo magazines would have “Shoot outs” for a film category, like high speed slide? They would magnify little portions, examine the colors, pontificate, etc.
OK, so I’ve made a dozen or more identical test prints with the papers I have, including the recently arrived Canon Pro Platinum. The original image was taken with Kodak 400 HD (High Definition, yes, it was, very crisp!) color negative film developed by moi with a Unicolor kit, and scanned at 2400 dpi, 8 bit. The subject is some red fall chrysanthemums and foliage.
The image I used is very heavy in reds and greens and is pretty close to having all 0-255 levels. An interesting thing is that even though there is no visible blue, the histograms show that there is almost as much of it as the visible reds and greens!
This image was printed all of the papers that I have, but at the end of the day, I concentrated on Canon papers: Platinum, Luster, Glossy II, Matte, Semi-Gloss. All were printed on the PRO-100 with factory inks with appropriate profiles.
I viewed under incandescent and indoor sunlight, both direct and indirect. I mentally selected several red and green areas to compare, and used an “overall look,” too.
The envelope, please:
Under incandescent light, the differences are so minimal as to, for all practical purposes, not exist. Probably partly due to lack of UV and the paper whiteners. Yes, the matte paper, not surprisingly, doesn’t get the Dmax that the glossies do. At 9 cents a letter sized sheet, so what, for proofs or prints on the cheap?
In direct indoor daylight, there were differences, but subtle. Yes, the Platinum paper did have richer colors than the Glossy II and others, but it was only apparent side by side and with a critical eye. The Platinum background white was noticeably whiter than the other coated papers, other than Matte. The latter, very white, too.
In indirect indoor daylight, the differences were in between. Very difficult to see differences.
Most of the differences are what I would call “margin of error” types, differences in color or saturation or levels so small as to not matter. Perhaps profiling nuances. Or, perhaps they could be tweaked with saturation or other settings if you were really anal. Or, more logically, who compares a print on the wall with another one? I.e., all are great.
It appears to me that Canon has created an ink and paper environment that is pretty much consistent and uniform. "Set it and forget it." Even Inkpress, a respected third party paper manufacturer/reseller tells Canon Inkpress users to just use the closest surface type Canon profiles and all is well. (Unlike Epson, he he he. Lots of custom profiles necessary.) I can print on my five cartridge ip4500, my eight cartridge 9000, or the PRO-100 and it all works just fine. Perfect, or at the least, perfect to the typical viewer.
I would say that for hanging on a wall in indirect daylight, use any Canon paper you want. Perhaps what is cheapest, or a surface preference, or what you have on hand. Keep in mind, not all subjects or final results need Pro paper. The subjective bottom line is, it really doesn’t matter. Presumably you are not displaying in direct sunlight, right?
OK, so I’ve made a dozen or more identical test prints with the papers I have, including the recently arrived Canon Pro Platinum. The original image was taken with Kodak 400 HD (High Definition, yes, it was, very crisp!) color negative film developed by moi with a Unicolor kit, and scanned at 2400 dpi, 8 bit. The subject is some red fall chrysanthemums and foliage.
The image I used is very heavy in reds and greens and is pretty close to having all 0-255 levels. An interesting thing is that even though there is no visible blue, the histograms show that there is almost as much of it as the visible reds and greens!
This image was printed all of the papers that I have, but at the end of the day, I concentrated on Canon papers: Platinum, Luster, Glossy II, Matte, Semi-Gloss. All were printed on the PRO-100 with factory inks with appropriate profiles.
I viewed under incandescent and indoor sunlight, both direct and indirect. I mentally selected several red and green areas to compare, and used an “overall look,” too.
The envelope, please:
Under incandescent light, the differences are so minimal as to, for all practical purposes, not exist. Probably partly due to lack of UV and the paper whiteners. Yes, the matte paper, not surprisingly, doesn’t get the Dmax that the glossies do. At 9 cents a letter sized sheet, so what, for proofs or prints on the cheap?
In direct indoor daylight, there were differences, but subtle. Yes, the Platinum paper did have richer colors than the Glossy II and others, but it was only apparent side by side and with a critical eye. The Platinum background white was noticeably whiter than the other coated papers, other than Matte. The latter, very white, too.
In indirect indoor daylight, the differences were in between. Very difficult to see differences.
Most of the differences are what I would call “margin of error” types, differences in color or saturation or levels so small as to not matter. Perhaps profiling nuances. Or, perhaps they could be tweaked with saturation or other settings if you were really anal. Or, more logically, who compares a print on the wall with another one? I.e., all are great.
It appears to me that Canon has created an ink and paper environment that is pretty much consistent and uniform. "Set it and forget it." Even Inkpress, a respected third party paper manufacturer/reseller tells Canon Inkpress users to just use the closest surface type Canon profiles and all is well. (Unlike Epson, he he he. Lots of custom profiles necessary.) I can print on my five cartridge ip4500, my eight cartridge 9000, or the PRO-100 and it all works just fine. Perfect, or at the least, perfect to the typical viewer.
I would say that for hanging on a wall in indirect daylight, use any Canon paper you want. Perhaps what is cheapest, or a surface preference, or what you have on hand. Keep in mind, not all subjects or final results need Pro paper. The subjective bottom line is, it really doesn’t matter. Presumably you are not displaying in direct sunlight, right?