David Lyga
Member
The most common thinking on this is to mount on either white or buff matte board. I do not understand this standardization and these are the reasons why:
1) One would think, in purely objective terms, that the presenter would want the eye to be drawn into, towards, the (important) 'light' and not have the (peripheral) matte board light competing with the print. (But, perhaps, a valid counterargument would be that the surrounding brightness allows the eye to be drawn into the density of the print.)
2) One's eyes are taxed a bit more when having to see so much brightness surrounding the focus of attention.
3) A black matte board presents an empty space; a 'nothingness'. The print, thus, becomes the only important element therein, and, thus isolated, is able to attract more visual attention.
I would like to hear both objective and subjective arguments for or against the options. - David Lyga
1) One would think, in purely objective terms, that the presenter would want the eye to be drawn into, towards, the (important) 'light' and not have the (peripheral) matte board light competing with the print. (But, perhaps, a valid counterargument would be that the surrounding brightness allows the eye to be drawn into the density of the print.)
2) One's eyes are taxed a bit more when having to see so much brightness surrounding the focus of attention.
3) A black matte board presents an empty space; a 'nothingness'. The print, thus, becomes the only important element therein, and, thus isolated, is able to attract more visual attention.
I would like to hear both objective and subjective arguments for or against the options. - David Lyga
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