Twald
Printing Apprentice
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2013
- Messages
- 14
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 12
- Location
- South Dakota, USA
- Printer Model
- Canon 9500
First off, I am (planning on) printing with Precision Colors ink. I have been experimenting with various media type/profile combinations for printing on cheap matte photo paper. The paper I am using is Canon Matte Photo Paper and Epson Doubleweight Matte.
The result I get with the Matte Photo Paper profile and the Matte Photo Paper media type are unacceptable. I cannot get any dark colors. Using the Soft Proofing feature in Lightroom 4 shows a bad image, and that is how it prints. Keeping the Matte Photo Paper profile and changing the media type to Fine Art Premium Matte drastically improves the print results. Using the Photo Rag media type also gives me better results than the plain Matte Photo Paper media type.
My understanding is that the media type is what determines the paper's ink load. I need to profile the papers I plan to use with the PC ink, but before I do that, which media type should I use for printing the patches? Can anyone provide me with a guide as to what the ink loads of the various media types are? With even a "Most, Less, Least, etc." designation, I could create several profiles for each paper and decide at the time of printing whether to prioritize flexibility or print quality by choosing the appropriate media type and profile.
The Fine Art type seems an obvious media type choice but it restricts me to the 35mm margins and letter or A3 paper sizes. The Photo Rag media type gives better results than the Matte Photo Paper type but it still imposes a small margin. I would like to print borderless or at least with a more reasonable border than 35mm. I would also like to print 4x6 photos.
I am printing from Lightroom 4 and the soft proofing feature provides me with an impressively close likeness to the final look of the print, particularly in terms of how badly the shadows will be out of gamut. One oddity that I have observed is that using the Fine Art Premium Matte media type together with the Matte Photo Paper profile will give me a print that looks much like the Fine Art Premium Matte. This leads me to believe that the media type (i.e. ink load) is a greater factor in image quality than the profile itself.
Another question: is it reasonable to expect a wider gamut out of a custom profile made with the Matte Photo Paper media type than the OEM Matte Photo Paper has? My thinking is that perhaps Canon designed that profile with ink economy as a priority.
The result I get with the Matte Photo Paper profile and the Matte Photo Paper media type are unacceptable. I cannot get any dark colors. Using the Soft Proofing feature in Lightroom 4 shows a bad image, and that is how it prints. Keeping the Matte Photo Paper profile and changing the media type to Fine Art Premium Matte drastically improves the print results. Using the Photo Rag media type also gives me better results than the plain Matte Photo Paper media type.
My understanding is that the media type is what determines the paper's ink load. I need to profile the papers I plan to use with the PC ink, but before I do that, which media type should I use for printing the patches? Can anyone provide me with a guide as to what the ink loads of the various media types are? With even a "Most, Less, Least, etc." designation, I could create several profiles for each paper and decide at the time of printing whether to prioritize flexibility or print quality by choosing the appropriate media type and profile.
The Fine Art type seems an obvious media type choice but it restricts me to the 35mm margins and letter or A3 paper sizes. The Photo Rag media type gives better results than the Matte Photo Paper type but it still imposes a small margin. I would like to print borderless or at least with a more reasonable border than 35mm. I would also like to print 4x6 photos.
I am printing from Lightroom 4 and the soft proofing feature provides me with an impressively close likeness to the final look of the print, particularly in terms of how badly the shadows will be out of gamut. One oddity that I have observed is that using the Fine Art Premium Matte media type together with the Matte Photo Paper profile will give me a print that looks much like the Fine Art Premium Matte. This leads me to believe that the media type (i.e. ink load) is a greater factor in image quality than the profile itself.
Another question: is it reasonable to expect a wider gamut out of a custom profile made with the Matte Photo Paper media type than the OEM Matte Photo Paper has? My thinking is that perhaps Canon designed that profile with ink economy as a priority.