Noisegate
Member
I have never experimented with duotone. I will give that a shot on my next printing session.Have you tried printing the B&W's with the printer you use for color? I don't generally do color but shoot film and scan tthe negatives. I only have one 3880 so I print with the Epson inks on Hahnemuhle and Moab papers. I also use the eyeball techniques. While it may sound weird to those who like the "science of digital" I get excellent results. Here's what I do: scan (2 1/4 or 4x5) with SilverFast Studio 8, open in PhotoShop, convert to gray scale, edit, copy and make a new file, convert the original to RGB, change the copy to duotone and use a tritone* that gives me a warm slightly more contrasty image, convert that to RGB and copy, on the original make another layer and paste the tritoned image and modify that layer to taste.select all layers and copy merged (in case you want to go back to tweak). It gives me a slightly warm black VERY close to Ilford multigrade fiber paper from my wet darkroom and a great result on matte and glossy rag Hahnemuhle and Moab Juniper.
It sounds like work but *save the tritone setting and it's mainly copying and pasting.
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