Thanks, Calzone. Very interesting. I've seen Piezo results. Perfect BW, I thought.
I have a Canon Pro-1000. I've tried i1Studio profiling, with and without using the printer's built-in hardware for calibrating paper and customizing paper settings. Not good enough. I've tried Canson's profile using its paper settings. Much better, but the dark grays and shadows are still suspiciously warm, and the warmth seem uneven through the darkness levels. (Ilford's are poor; the only other brand I've tried, but only sampled, is Hahnemühle, but that was before I switched to digital, and all my negs are technically too crappy for printing.) I use OEM ink. It seems to do a better job with colour printing. I'm going to buy custom prints. If that doesn't do the trick for BW, I'll lie awake at nights dreaming of an Epson.
APFR,
I would recommend digging into Jon Cone’s site for a long-long time to learn about the good, the bad, and the ugly about Eason printers. Lots on free info there.
I use an Eason 7800 (24 inch floor standing printer) that I call the “Jersey Barrier.” Somehow in a NYC Meet-Up I secured this old printer that was seldom used (made less than 2K prints in a decade) for a hundred dollars.
I kinda went off the deep end and bulked up on inks and paper ($10K) with the goal to become a master printer in B&W. This then led to me being invited by Jon Cone to be a Beta tester for the Piezography Pro under development. The reason I bulked up and spent so much on supplies in one year was to take advantage of seasonal sales to save money.
The thing with Piezography is it lays down lots of ink, then compound that with exploiting the enhanced resolution and tonality it favors printing big. Pretty much people asked if I was shooting large format film and wet printing. My prints have a lot of depth, and the cool shadows suggested a wet print.
So Piezography is an expensive rabbit hole, but know that Piezography Pro is developed as a turnkey printing system that allows printing digital negatives for contact printing. How crazy is that. Pretty much I can do a “Salgado” without the best French lab in Paris. No ink changes required and pretty much what you see is what you get on your calibrated monitor.
Not sure if you want to print color, but know that using Jon Cone color inks is very cost effective because the ink is about 1/10th the price of Eason inks.
The bad and ugly is that I found the paper transport of a Epson 3880 to be a limitation, and the printer was too small to really exploit Piezography. The 3880 which I bought new I killed through heavy use. My old 7800 seemed to be one of the most durable printers ever made. I had to replace the dampers, and currently it is stored with a set of carts loaded with Piezoflush.
Piezoflush pretty much allows me to store my printer safely.
BTW my two favorite papers are Plantine Fiber Rag and Jon Cones Type 5, both warm papers.
So if you decide to go realize to really exploit Piezography it will be mucho expensive…
Cal