I've read a few sources (e.g. Barry Thornton) that suggest that modern inkjet printing can reliably produce results that are technically and aesthetically superior to analog printing by optical enlargement. Is this true?
First, how does the dynamic range of photographic paper compare to that of consumer or "prosumer" inks and inkjet paper? (I'm sure this data is readily available online, but I can't find it.) I think this is really the key issue, though of things like avoiding color casts in the inkjet prints also matter. Are there are other measurable and objective technical factors to take into consideration?
Second, to get specific, let's compare a Canon Pixma Pro-100 (or something in that price bracket) printing monochrome on 8x10 semigloss to an optical enlargement on Ilford multicontrast 8x10 pearl RC paper with a good lens and enlarger. The prints are both 6x9. Suppose the Pro-100 is printing a good scan (from a 24MP DSLR) from the same negative being enlarged. Can the inkjet produce results that are as "good" as the Ilford print? If no, does the answer change if we use a better printer? (I'm purposely sticking to semigloss papers for the comparison since the Pro-100 is a dye ink printer and has trouble with matte papers.)
Thanks in advance for your comments. My suspicion is that inkjet technology has advanced to the point where it's superior, but I'm looking for data to substantiate (or disprove!) this claim.
First, how does the dynamic range of photographic paper compare to that of consumer or "prosumer" inks and inkjet paper? (I'm sure this data is readily available online, but I can't find it.) I think this is really the key issue, though of things like avoiding color casts in the inkjet prints also matter. Are there are other measurable and objective technical factors to take into consideration?
Second, to get specific, let's compare a Canon Pixma Pro-100 (or something in that price bracket) printing monochrome on 8x10 semigloss to an optical enlargement on Ilford multicontrast 8x10 pearl RC paper with a good lens and enlarger. The prints are both 6x9. Suppose the Pro-100 is printing a good scan (from a 24MP DSLR) from the same negative being enlarged. Can the inkjet produce results that are as "good" as the Ilford print? If no, does the answer change if we use a better printer? (I'm purposely sticking to semigloss papers for the comparison since the Pro-100 is a dye ink printer and has trouble with matte papers.)
Thanks in advance for your comments. My suspicion is that inkjet technology has advanced to the point where it's superior, but I'm looking for data to substantiate (or disprove!) this claim.
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