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- Sep 5, 2004
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Trying to get my head around QTR, so please bear with me. I recently replaced a 3800 because of grain and banding, and while the banding has been fixed with the new one, grain has not- at least with QTR.
I'm getting perfect values in the shadows and midtones, but cannot get values above 30% to unblock without getting very pronounced grain. It would seem that with the 'dark' ink mix of CMYK controlling the highlights, the UV blocking properties of the 4 inks would need to be extremely similar, otherwise grain would be the result. Certainly the dither matrix is easy to see with yellow and cyan in with black ink. In other words if the UV blocking properties of each ink weren't the same, the dither pattern visible in the negative would be in the print. Am I missing something? It seems like that with 4 dark inks controlling the highlights, you would have to curve each ink separately, not just follow the K curve. Right?
Or am I being a tedious simpleton? I'm getting great gradients with green negatives and no apparent grain. I must be doing something wrong with QTR. It literally looks as if the inks aren't atomizing enough off the nozzles, and the dots of each dark CMYK ink each are plainly visible. Is this normal? Enclosed is a scan of the 'transition' to grain.
Maybe I'll try overlaying the neg on the print and try to see what inks aren't pulling their weight (so to speak) and turn those off, or at least scale them back. Or crank them up.
I'm getting perfect values in the shadows and midtones, but cannot get values above 30% to unblock without getting very pronounced grain. It would seem that with the 'dark' ink mix of CMYK controlling the highlights, the UV blocking properties of the 4 inks would need to be extremely similar, otherwise grain would be the result. Certainly the dither matrix is easy to see with yellow and cyan in with black ink. In other words if the UV blocking properties of each ink weren't the same, the dither pattern visible in the negative would be in the print. Am I missing something? It seems like that with 4 dark inks controlling the highlights, you would have to curve each ink separately, not just follow the K curve. Right?
Or am I being a tedious simpleton? I'm getting great gradients with green negatives and no apparent grain. I must be doing something wrong with QTR. It literally looks as if the inks aren't atomizing enough off the nozzles, and the dots of each dark CMYK ink each are plainly visible. Is this normal? Enclosed is a scan of the 'transition' to grain.
Maybe I'll try overlaying the neg on the print and try to see what inks aren't pulling their weight (so to speak) and turn those off, or at least scale them back. Or crank them up.
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Cheers and thanks again.