The other point I'd bring up is the hang up people have that "real chemical" prints are the only "honest" way to print films. It's amazing how many people I've spoken to tell me they shoot film because they take their film to a lab who has a "chemical" machine and makes "real" prints.
However for at least the last 10 years I don't know of any lab in Australia that prints optically - they all use machines like Fuji Frontier's or Noritsu's which scan the negatives and then print them with LED's or lasers...
So if a film is not printed optically is the print (chemical or otherwise) a real interpretation of the negative?
One for another day and another beer.....
For me, simple long term familiarity and proven lifetime of photo-chemical prints has a preference over the unknowns of inkjet permanance, notwithstanding the 'accelerated fade' testing that one reads about. We have no control over selection of inkjet paper or ink, when we get prints from commercial inkjet print houses. So permanence tests are likely to not apply for any given location, unless you know with certainty what paper and what ink are used and if they both match published permanence testing.
But even more importantly (for me) is the appearance of prints on Fuji Crystal Archive paper vs. any inkjet surface I have seen. Lastly, any inkjet is ink applied to the surface on top of coated paper, whereas color dyes embedded in the emulsion simply are more appealing to my eye.
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