I am also finding (during my very short experience with Pro-100 so far) that when using the Canon paper, I can get rather neutral b/w, but paper is plastiky. Good for framing but does not feel right in hands.martin0reg said:In my experience the "tone" of a wet darkroom (b&w) print is more consistent or uniform compared to the often unpredictable color cast of a b&w print out of color inkjet printer. Furthermore different lighting of the prints can produce different color cast.Mikesht said:...
Plus, even when I print b/w by hand, I never get completely neutral b/w, and I dont like it as much. I sometimes toned them, but most of a time they come out toned already, based on paper I used.
Newer inkjet printers are getting better because of gray inks, but they hardly achieve this pure b&w "look". Printing with only black and grey inks could come as close as possible to wet darkroom b&w prints.
But when I use Ilford Gold Silk Mono, for example, which I like a lot better than Canon, the color management get a lot trickier. But as I said, color cast does not bother me, as long as it's a proper color cast
As far as different color cast under different lighting, I know what you are referring to exactly, but I find this to be a lot lesser issue with Pro-100 than with other prints I got from Mpix, Costco and other sources like that.
Mikhail
http://mikhailsteinberg.com/