Robert Kennedy
Member
This is simply a rant.
Last night I hit a few openings in town.
At one gallery, I saw some great prints by Larry Wiese. Really nice work. I enjoyed them immensely. They were, accurately labeled, "silver gelatin".
At the same gallery some other artists had prints for perusal.
Never in my life have I seen so many different ways to deal with digital output!
It is, and I honestly believe this, like nobody has set the standard yet by which to describe digital output methods.
E.g.
"Digital Frontier Print"
"Digital Frontier C-41 Print"
"Frontier C Print"
Etc. etc.
Now I know this is nitpicky, but could SOMEONE JUST PICK SOMETHING!
How about "digital C print"?
It describes Frontier technology as well as a few other methods out there.
It is simple. It is basic.
It tells me all I need to know.
If it is an inkjet print I need to know two things -
1 - That it is an inkjet print
2 - If it is "archival" (loose term here, but we need to weed out the stuff that came off a "Free with every Dell" printer)
That is it.
I don't need to know who made the printer. I don't need to know the model number of the printer.
I mean nobody is saying "Durst silver gelatin," or "Photographers Formulary printing frame (birch)."
O.k. Rant over.
Last night I hit a few openings in town.
At one gallery, I saw some great prints by Larry Wiese. Really nice work. I enjoyed them immensely. They were, accurately labeled, "silver gelatin".
At the same gallery some other artists had prints for perusal.
Never in my life have I seen so many different ways to deal with digital output!
It is, and I honestly believe this, like nobody has set the standard yet by which to describe digital output methods.
E.g.
"Digital Frontier Print"
"Digital Frontier C-41 Print"
"Frontier C Print"
Etc. etc.
Now I know this is nitpicky, but could SOMEONE JUST PICK SOMETHING!
How about "digital C print"?
It describes Frontier technology as well as a few other methods out there.
It is simple. It is basic.
It tells me all I need to know.
If it is an inkjet print I need to know two things -
1 - That it is an inkjet print
2 - If it is "archival" (loose term here, but we need to weed out the stuff that came off a "Free with every Dell" printer)
That is it.
I don't need to know who made the printer. I don't need to know the model number of the printer.
I mean nobody is saying "Durst silver gelatin," or "Photographers Formulary printing frame (birch)."
O.k. Rant over.