Bob Carnie
Subscriber
Drew - Do your fuji flex have any more archival attributes than inkjet?? If so could you elaborate.
The problem with true pigments prints is long-term substrate and layer bonding, esp with the quad color carbro process. Gum is built up layer
by layer, so a bit different logistically. I've envisioned using a completely different league of pigments for these kinds of things, but might not
ever have time to go beyond basic theory. It would be sad to lose a high-gloss medium capable of great detail and depth. In terms of hue control, I've managed to learn to expose and mask color neg films with a great deal of accuracy. But inkjet is more a modern replacement for dye transfer, commercially, while Fujiflex replaces Ciba visually. I don't think RA4 is at risk commercially anytime soon. But some kind of change is inevitable. The problem with inkjet is that it has already begun to a "good enough" plateau, just like RA4 did for several decades, with only modest R&D improvements. I'm not worried. There is always black and white to fall back on, and I've also got enough
real dye transfer supplies on hand to at least make a fool out of myself. I do covet a new matcutter (an Esterly).
I use only small amounts of gum arabic for relatively exotic retouching problems. Do you have a good source for quantity with quality? That would be my potential concern. Or maybe there are substitute vehicles to traditional gum? The other is that I would want to totally rethink registration. Most traditional gum printers were pretty loose in this respect. But you have a strong background in that category of task. I do have a clue to obtaining superior pigment transparency with greater permanence, but haven't tried this in a gum solution yet, though there should be no hypothetical problem, since it's water soluble.
Here we go again. When are you going to get through your head - all photographs and prints are fictitious because the film itself does not record "accurately". Every transition from subject through camera optical system to film to negative to paper has its own distortion. So it is ridiculous to say dodging and burning inherently lead to more fiction than a straight print. What if dodging and burning help correct for the distortion of tones created by the original negative? A straight print might be more fictitious than a print which has been manipulated.
The notion the film records faithfully and must be printed straight is preposterous. It implies the negative is "correct" to begin with, which is not the case. And different films might record the scene slightly differently. Which one is unmanipulated? Which one is right? And even if one assumes the negative isn't fictitious, a straight print on one paper might look different than a straight print on another paper. Which one is correct?
I have no beef with the philosophy all prints should be straight. Print any way you see fit. But know it is simply a personal preference for a particular working method. Don't fool yourself into thinking it leads to a print which is more faithful to the original subject.
Lik is someone who really needs to be regarded as a digital technician rather than analog, because the images are generally massively PS altered and effectively fictitious.
As are all photographic chemical prints that are dodged and burned.
Yeah, it's drifted, and people are probably sick of my opinions by now. Lik is someone who really needs to be regarded as a digital technician rather than analog, because the images are generally massively PS altered and effectively fictitious; and I think a number of people who have challenged my comments have never even seen in person just how poorly rendered, technique-wise, his images tend to be in print form. Not exactly what most of us would term, "fine" prints. ... But per gum prints, I might be able to grab some separation negs out of my files and test my own set of process pigments in an 8x10 contact print application. That would at least establish viability of the ingredients. Fine tuning anything like that takes a lot more effort, obviously. But not this year. I've over my head already.
I am afraid RA4 will see its end days within 5 years.
You can't drive art to work or fly it to your vacation destination. You can't feed your family with it. .
Maybe the RA4 discussion should go elsewhere.........
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