Hello Karl, Your best bet is sending your printed pages to a traditional bindery. However there may be complications in using matte media in an album. Ink on one page will rub off on the facing page so you would have to coat the prints. Typically bindery will refuse to coat matte media so you'd have to coat them yourself. But coating matte prints in an album is very different from coating them for archival purpose. For the former you'd have to lay the coating on relatively thick to prevent ink rub off. This necessitate reprofiling for the coated media as you will observe significant hue and density shift, and your print will no longer be matte. It appears you may be better off using glossy media which accepts coating relatively easier. But even with these you have to experiment to see which coating works best. There is one media which I know works great with the R1800: HP premium plus satin or glossy. Though this media is not recommended or even designed for pigment ink, it works amazingly well. The swellable polymer coating on it receives the ink and seals it much like the best spray coating you can find out there, and it accepts Premiere PrintShield better than anything I've seen. But you must let the print cure for a week before stacking the prints or spraying them with PrintShield. (I wish I had a wedding client who wants matte no matter how hard I try to sell it. I even went as far as making two albums, a matte and a glossy, and ended up keeping the matte for myself). --nick --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, "wolzphoto" <wolzphoto@...> wrote: > I need to bind a wedding album ... > I'll be printing the project as duotones on an > Epson 4800 and would prefer using matt (but > probably not textured) paper. > ...
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Re: binding a wedding album
2006-03-21 by Nick H. Nugent
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