janosh
Member
I'm generally with Godfrey on this. I use a Nikon V scanner (though am dealing with a lot less film these days) and an Epson 3800 with OEM pigments and its native ABW B&W driver. PC/Lightroom. I also agree with part of what Kanzir said....but I remain a little nostalgic for wet darkroom and I never minded the chems.
If you can visualize your B&W image when you make the photo, or from the file, you can get what you want from inkjet by developing the same sorts of basic skills you'd need in a darkroom. I differ with Godfrey's concern with calibration etc for that reason. B&W photographers that I've known are used to visualizing with minimal tech.
Crane Museo and Ilford Gold Fiber Silk papers are favorites, typically toned warm (tending toward selenium), but Office Depot (big box store, like Staples) sells ultra-cheap, brilliant white "professional photo paper" matte surface that serves wonderfully...I don't deliver important prints on it: it's a little thin and I'd be embarassed because it's so cheap 🙂
Nobody here will be able to tell the difference between a fine inkjet print on similar paper (fiber/baryta) and a fine silver print from the same neg without a loupe, and with the loupe they'll find the inkjet print higher resolution if it was well scanned (eg with a Nikon scanner).
Look here...and take part if you'd like: http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBW-PrintExchanges/ Virtually everybody in this group uses Epson printers, and my 3800 is among the oldest. If I was buying today I'd get a 3880 directly from Epson (not from a dealer) as a refurb.
If you can visualize your B&W image when you make the photo, or from the file, you can get what you want from inkjet by developing the same sorts of basic skills you'd need in a darkroom. I differ with Godfrey's concern with calibration etc for that reason. B&W photographers that I've known are used to visualizing with minimal tech.
Crane Museo and Ilford Gold Fiber Silk papers are favorites, typically toned warm (tending toward selenium), but Office Depot (big box store, like Staples) sells ultra-cheap, brilliant white "professional photo paper" matte surface that serves wonderfully...I don't deliver important prints on it: it's a little thin and I'd be embarassed because it's so cheap 🙂
Nobody here will be able to tell the difference between a fine inkjet print on similar paper (fiber/baryta) and a fine silver print from the same neg without a loupe, and with the loupe they'll find the inkjet print higher resolution if it was well scanned (eg with a Nikon scanner).
Look here...and take part if you'd like: http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/DigitalBW-PrintExchanges/ Virtually everybody in this group uses Epson printers, and my 3800 is among the oldest. If I was buying today I'd get a 3880 directly from Epson (not from a dealer) as a refurb.
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