Bob, I'm glad to hear this worked out for you. Mr. Caponigro gets the credit. Working from what he described in his article I played with the red and blue levels and thought that it would at least give you a reasonable starting point. I recommend his website you. The page on his current issue has two B&W images and there are many others as you go through his on line gallery. http://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/ He also talks about his methods at: http://www.johnpaulcaponigro.com/faqs/printing.html I believe the key to success here is good color calibration. Sounds crazy talking about color calibration to print B&W but it is actually even more important. In fact if you want to check your color calibration try to print a neutral B&W image! In printing a full range color print slight tonal shifts will not be noticeable but in a B&W will stick out like a sore thumb! Caponigro's idea to use levels on different adjustment layers gives you a way to do the very delicate tonal adjustment requires. He does worn that you may need to do minor tweaking when changing materials. Keep us posted on how it goes. Martin --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@y..., Robert Bollini <rbollini@n...> wrote: > Martin Wesley recently suggested a simple device for producing neutral > BW prints from a set of colour inks. Perhaps derived from the referenced > article by Caponegro fils in which he apparently argued the use of > PShop levels, Martin suggested that one might begin with the blue and > red channels each set to 1.0. > > This morning I fired up my Win98SE rig, profiled with Photocal and > ProfilerRGB, and driving an Epson 1160 using Jon Cone's Darngoodink. In > PShop 6.0, I opened a coloured image of ferns in the forest taken with a > Canon G1 digital camera. I used channel mixer, a couple of curves > adjustment layers, and the high pass sharpener, and only then adjusted > the gamma with layers as above. Printing on Epson Photo Paper (Yay > Costco! 28c Canadian per 8.5x11 sheet!) at about 6x8 in., I found the > print too red. I returned to the snapshot I had made before tinting the > image in levels, and set red to 1.05 and blue to 1.12. > > Now I've tried all the stunts -- Reichman's, Fraser's, and a hatful of > other helpful volunteers. None of them gave me a print anywhere near as > neutral as this one as it emerged from the gullet of the 1160. In > daylight it's just about perfect, and betrays only the slightest hint of > purple under tungsten: no more metamerism, in other words, than the > prints I toned in selenium many years ago. A fluke? Maybe. I'll let you > know. So far, pretty exciting. Thanks, Martin. > Bob Bollini
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Re: neutral BW w colour inks
2001-08-07 by mwesley250@earthlink.net
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