It is "PiezoGloss" paper that only remains glossy with Canon Piezotone ink. Epson piezotone ink will exhibit the buffing/powder coat that it does on all the other glossy papers. Which I guess indicates that there is something funky going on with the Canon version. I hope they have fully tested whatever that funkiness is for proper archival properties. -mh --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "Austin Franklin" <darkroom@i...> wrote: > Tom, > > > I find his comments on his new PiezoGloss paper interesting too: "It is a > > high gloss surface after printing and this is going to be very > > popular with > > those looking for gloss. But the paper only glosses with the PiezoTone > > formulation for Canon." > > Er, huh? Either the paper is glossy or not. The paper doesn't get every > square nano-micron hit with ink...so I'm not clear how that would be > possible. Is this saying that it's the ink that glosses, and the white > areas of the paper don't gloss? That would look weird! > > Austin
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[Digital BW] Re: Are Clogs Common? (was Jon Cone's new B/W system)
2003-03-01 by mh <mh@toomanyartists.com>
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