What is a "giclée" print ... really?

Dog Opposites

A
Dog Opposites

  • 2
  • 3
  • 113
Acrobatics in the Vondelpark

A
Acrobatics in the Vondelpark

  • 6
  • 5
  • 197
Finn Slough Fishing Net

A
Finn Slough Fishing Net

  • 1
  • 0
  • 109
Dried roses

A
Dried roses

  • 14
  • 8
  • 205
Hot Rod

A
Hot Rod

  • 5
  • 0
  • 119

Recent Classifieds

Forum statistics

Threads
197,471
Messages
2,759,576
Members
99,514
Latest member
cukon
Recent bookmarks
1

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
She took a while to explain, and my understanding of it is not that it means “inkjet”, plain and simple.
So the lady either sold you a bogus story (with or without realizing it) or you simply misunderstood.
There's no confusion about the meaning of the word 'giclee' in the context of arts. Here's a nice summary: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giclée
It simply means "inkjet print". That's really all there is to it.
 

fdonadio

Member
Joined
Jan 15, 2015
Messages
2,060
Location
Berlin, DE
Format
Multi Format
So the lady either sold you a bogus story (with or without realizing it) or you simply misunderstood.
According to the Wikipedia article you cited, I have completely misunderstood her and I stand corrected.

Anyway, since the moment I understood that wasn’t the original artwork, my interested just died. At the time, this so-called “giclée” costed around USD 5,000! Even though it was really eye-catching, I couldn’t pay that much for a digitally printed copy of an original artwork.

Personally, I disregard even digitally printed copies of photos originally created in traditional processes. For me, if it’s been shot on film, I will only accept a wet-print copy of it.

But then it’s only my opinion…
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2017
Messages
9,261
Location
New Jersey formerly NYC
Format
Multi Format
I don't really understand why [especially the young] digital photographers talk so much about sRGB vs. Adobe RGB. Yes, there is a difference that, even with a calibrated professional monitor (that costs over USD 10,000), is indistinguishable for most people.

Also, no printer does RGB. They all do CMYK, some of them have extra colors for a wider gamut. We all know that, even with these so-called wide-gamut printers, it's still a lot narrower than sRGB.

Can anyone tell the difference between sRGB, Adobe RGB, and the others without having two photo prints to look at simultaneously? And if so, does it really matter? I adjust and shoot in sRGB because almost all my photos only get used on the web which is in sRGB. My monitor is calibrated for sRGB as well.
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
Can anyone tell the difference between sRGB, Adobe RGB

1745004697348.png


And if so, does it really matter?

For all intents and purposes - no, not really. A digital camera can generally record outside sRGB space, but then you still run into gamut issues when trying to display let alone print the images. For computer display, things have improved with monitors that offer a large gamut as well. However, even then, you'll only really notice the difference on a side-by-side comparison. Which, of course, can still be a compelling argument to get the latest & greatest. If it wouldn't matter at all, these advances wouldn't exist. Is it something to lose any sleep over? Hardly.

My monitor is calibrated for sRGB as well.

No, it isn't, but (1) it doesn't really matter, (2) going into the question why not would be unnecessarily technical. Your monitor will happily display whatever colors thrown at it, within the limits of its gamut. Whether the colors come out as they should is a question of running color management-aware software.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2017
Messages
9,261
Location
New Jersey formerly NYC
Format
Multi Format
View attachment 396678



For all intents and purposes - no, not really. A digital camera can generally record outside sRGB space, but then you still run into gamut issues when trying to display let alone print the images. For computer display, things have improved with monitors that offer a large gamut as well. However, even then, you'll only really notice the difference on a side-by-side comparison. Which, of course, can still be a compelling argument to get the latest & greatest. If it wouldn't matter at all, these advances wouldn't exist. Is it something to lose any sleep over? Hardly.



No, it isn't, but (1) it doesn't really matter, (2) going into the question why not would be unnecessarily technical. Your monitor will happily display whatever colors thrown at it, within the limits of its gamut. Whether the colors come out as they should is a question of running color management-aware software.

I have a NEC calibratable monitor using SpectraView II calibration software and puck. So I;,m assuming I;,m looking at the sRGB gamut since I calibrate to it automatically with the NEX program. Am I?
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format

No - but it doesn't matter. Your monitor is calibrated so that you can assume it displays colors as intended, without any significant casts etc.
What the gamut of your monitor is, I don't know, but it's virtually certainly not exactly sRGB. It's probably slightly less in some places and/or slightly bigger in others. Your monitor has its unique, own color space. By calibrating it, you're essentially giving your computer a map that tells it what color data to send to the monitor so that it gets displayed correctly.
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
@logan2z @fdonadio how come you categorically prefer 'wet' prints? What makes you appreciate those prints to the extent that you will not accept the alternative? This question has been with me for some time. I've not been able to work it out entirely, I feel. Interested to hear what you guys make of it.
 

Don_ih

Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2021
Messages
7,364
Location
Ontario
Format
35mm RF
Sentimentally, there is a idealized continuity between the original act of composing the image and enlarging the negative onto paper. Consider it like pouring getting water from a well, pouring that water into a jug, then pouring the same water into a glass. The digitally produced print is like getting water from a well, pouring it into a jug, then pouring water into a glass from a different bottle. Looks the same, yes. Functions the same, probably tastes the same, practically identical. Sentimentally different.
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
@Don_ih that's also the argument that I came up with and pretty much the only one that seems to work if I challenge it.

Consider it like pouring getting water from a well, pouring that water into a jug, then pouring the same water into a glass. The digitally produced print is like getting water from a well, pouring it into a jug, then pouring water into a glass from a different bottle.
Well, yeah, I like how you put that, although the way I feel about it, it's still water all throughout the process in the second instance. To me, a hybrid workflow feels more like taking water from a well, then splitting it into hydrogen and oxygen, maybe doing some more high-tech convoluted stuff with it before turning it back into water again. The chemical parallel doesn't work very well IMO because there's always the laws of thermodynamics that result in some sort of continuity. With a hybrid photographic process, I feel the image is somehow temporarily 'lost' in a different realm before taken back into tangible reality, if that makes sense.
 

Don_ih

Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2021
Messages
7,364
Location
Ontario
Format
35mm RF
With a hybrid photographic process, I feel the image is somehow temporarily 'lost' in a different realm before taken back into tangible reality, if that makes sense.

That's what I meant by pouring water into the glass from a different bottle. It's water, but it's not even necessarily from the same well.

I prefer to make enlargements, but that has more to do with what I want to do than what I want to end up with. I've received some inkjet postcards in the exchange that you'd guess were fibre-based silver gelatin prints.

Anyway, there are likely a number of quite practical reasons to show inkjet prints of older photographs in a show, not the least of which is unavailability of the original negative to make a new print. It may be gone or too damaged. And it's likely much easier to find someone to make a big inkjet print than a big silver-gelatin one.

I do, however, sympathize with the desire to see the most authentic print possible when you go to a show. In a way, looking at inkjet prints would feel a bit like looking through a photo book. They're not the "real" thing, they're copies. And it doesn't alleviate the doubt you'd have wondering if a silver-gelatin enlargement wouldn't look just that much better.
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
Yes, thanks @Don_ih; I can relate to everything you said there.
The show of Madame Yevonde's prints made by Katayoun Dowlatshahi (@Katayounpd )last year in the Portrait Gallery (I didn't visit in person, sadly) comes to mind as an example of an IMO successful application of a hybrid workflow that at the same time at least stays true to the 'original water', so to speak. Katayoun made color carbon transfer prints using period-correct pigments, but from digital (halftone screen/imagesetter) negatives that were in turn based on scans of the original negatives.
 

foc

Subscriber
Joined
Jun 30, 2010
Messages
2,496
Location
Sligo, Ireland
Format
35mm
As I said in post # 32, back in 2018, I investigated the cost involved in changing my print minilab Frontier RA4 to a Frontier drylab (inkjet). I also got a chance to operate and run test prints through the Frontier drylab in the Fuji service centre in Dublin.

I had a series of images nn my USB stick and I printed them (drylab) in all the different print sizes, 6x4, 5x7, 6x8, 10x8 inches (10x15cm, 13x18cm, 15x20cm, 20x25cm).

The images were mostly my own, scenery, landscapes, portraits, and two technical images, a Fuji test card and an Ilford monitor set up.

I also brought with me the same images in the same print sizes that I had printed on my Frontier, on Fuji CA RA4 paper.

The prints were laid out side by side on the print inspection table (with daylight lighting lamps) and I asked some of the sales staff and two Frontier engineers, to view the prints and pick what they thought were, in their opinion, the best. A bonus question was which were the RA4 prints and which were the drylab.

It turned out 50:50 in both cases. The only difference that could be detected was the feel of the print and ofcourse looking at the back of the print.

I also tried the same in my lab/shop and asked random customers to do the same. I got the same results.

My own opinion is that most people don't know or care how the print was made.

Take from that what you will.
 

logan2z

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 11, 2019
Messages
3,610
Location
SF Bay Area, USA
Format
Multi Format
@logan2z @fdonadio how come you categorically prefer 'wet' prints? What makes you appreciate those prints to the extent that you will not accept the alternative? This question has been with me for some time. I've not been able to work it out entirely, I feel. Interested to hear what you guys make of it.

In my case, at least, there may be some sentimentality involved. I don’t think I can completely discount that. But I also think wet prints simply look better, so I don’t agree with the analogies above that seem to assume that an inkjet and silver gelatin print are indistinguishable.

Maybe inkjet technology is theoretically capable of producing an image with all of the qualities of a silver gelatin print, but the inkjet prints I’ve seen in galleries and museums have fallen short. I can always tell which I’m looking at even before reading the wall labels.
 

Don_ih

Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2021
Messages
7,364
Location
Ontario
Format
35mm RF
Katayoun made color carbon transfer prints using period-correct pigments, but from digital (halftone screen/imagesetter) negatives that were in turn based on scans of the original negatives.

And, when it comes down to it, what is the more important part of that process? Getting the colours right or using film negatives? Being contact prints, I doubt it would be possible to detect any difference - except you get a chance to try to fix any degrading of the negative (scratches, dirt, flaking, kinks) using the scan.

I don’t agree with the analogies above that seem to assume that an inkjet and silver gelatin print are indistinguishable

I don't assume they are indistinguishable. It can be hard to tell them apart. And, I would expect, since much work continues to be done on inkjet printing while none is done on silver-gelatin, it's just a matter of time before it will routinely be impossible to tell them apart.

It is a problem if you can look at a gallery print and see it's inkjet. Just like everything else, there will be people who are better at it and people who are worse.
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
I don’t agree with the analogies above that seem to assume that an inkjet and silver gelatin print are indistinguishable.

I don't agree either - although I also don't believe that wet prints necessarily look better. In my experience, they don't. It's hit & miss - a well-made wet print can look better than a poorly made inkjet, and vice versa.

And, when it comes down to it, what is the more important part of that process? Getting the colours right or using film negatives?

That's a hard question to answer (of which you're of course aware). I think they main importance of those prints is that they exist in the first place. And that someone did a thorough job at interpreting the images within the context they were made, insofar as that can be reconstructed. Had Katayoun opted to create a custom set of inkjet inks using these pigments or something similar, I'm sure she would have ended up with a similarly compelling end result.
 
Joined
Aug 29, 2017
Messages
9,261
Location
New Jersey formerly NYC
Format
Multi Format
If digital printing were invented simultaneously with chemical film photography, no one would say digital printing is unnatural and not true to photography. Let's face it, photography is all magical regardless of the process. None of the forms is natural. They're all depictions of the real thing. Are Life Magazine's artistic photos created through some printing process, not chemically created, a bogus form of photography? It's like when people argue that when they grew up, society was better.
 

fdonadio

Member
Joined
Jan 15, 2015
Messages
2,060
Location
Berlin, DE
Format
Multi Format
Hey, guys…


Sorry for setting the fire and running away.

Answering @koraks’ question from a few days ago, I would say mostly the same as @Don_ih, especially the part about “what I like to do”.

But I feel that a digital print of something shot on film is like a reproduction. It doesn’t feel “right” to me, except in the cases exemplified by @koraks himself: missing or damaged negative, etc. I have a picture of my mother that was digitally restored from a scan of a very damaged print.

To put it in a more specific way: in my opinion, contemporary work shot on film should follow the traditional photographic process. It’s how I like to do. What’s the point of shooting film otherwise?
 

Don_ih

Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2021
Messages
7,364
Location
Ontario
Format
35mm RF
What’s the point of shooting film otherwise?

People often ask that question. It is a bit loaded, though, and implies there is some integrity to the analogue process that gets betrayed by a digital step. But people are free to get the results they want however they see fit. If that's scanning negatives and digital prints, that's fine. It doesn't stop you or me from enlarging and feeling pleased about it.
 

_T_

Member
Joined
Feb 21, 2017
Messages
406
Location
EP
Format
4x5 Format
Inkjet printing is an engineering marvel of cutting edge microfluidics. You don’t need to call it something french for it to sound fancy.

In addition inkjet is the rising star which is continually being improved, a trend which we can expect to continue for the foreseeable future.

Wet printing on the other hand, while also a chemical marvel, is slowly receding. I don’t think there’s any future in which we can expect it to continue to advance in the way that inkjet is.

For me both processes have their place. Mostly because inkjet offers paper compositions and finishes that are superior for some of what I do. But most of my photos are digitally printed ra4 as it’s inexpensive and good enough for most photos.

As for going hybrid, my forté is digital image manipulation. So I shoot 4x5 to minmax scanned resolution. There are currently no digital cameras that can match the amount of information I get this way. Plus I get all the optical benefits of lens design for a larger sensor.

I have no interest in operating a darkroom anymore. After many years in labs I don’t have the energy to manage one for myself. Plus I don’t have space or money to get setup to make big enlargements from 4x5 so there’s no contest there. Hybrid is obvious for my situation.
 

Vaughn

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 13, 2006
Messages
10,012
Location
Humboldt Co.
Format
Large Format
Same here. I'm still appalled that a local museum showed inkjet prints at a Dorothea Lange exhibition. Unforgivable.
A National Monument's visitor center use to have an original Edward Weston (8x10) on the wall. A new visitor center was built and it was replaced with a photocopy of the print.

The ability to print inkjet negatives has revitalized the 'alternative' processes. While I still use camera negatives, the majority of workers in alt processes are using digital negatives with images from many sources...film, digital capture, etc. I recently saw some beautifully done multi-layed B&W carbon print made with five different negatives and ten layers. These were made using imagesetter negatives, but can be done with inkjet negs.

I find it odd the people react so strongly when others use the term silver gelatin and think that others using the term are just trying to be fancy or something. When discussing photography among other photographers, how else to describe a process that uses silver encased in gelatin, and differentiate it from other processes commonly used, such as platinum, carbon, or even other silver-based processes such as salt prints?
 

koraks

Moderator
Moderator
Joined
Nov 29, 2018
Messages
20,662
Location
Europe
Format
Multi Format
What’s the point of shooting film otherwise?

You could stretch that argument and ask what's the point in shooting film in the first place. Or shooting images at all. The problem with that argument is that it evidently never goes anywhere. Apparently some people find it worthwhile to shoot film even if they never print optically. I regularly develop film for my niece and scan the images; she seems perfectly happy with that output which she can send to friends & family through her phone. There's enough of a point in that for her to carry two cameras (digital + film) around when traveling. So the question really remains "why". "Why not" will never get us very far in this area.

especially the part about “what I like to do”.

Well, I can relate to that to an extent, and at the same time, I always feel a little uncomfortable with that argument. I feel I need to distinguish between my own 'work' (i.e. stacks of mediocre prints in boxes in the shed) and that of others. I can apply the criterion of "I want to like what I do" to my own photography - after all, I'm doing it, so I better do something that doesn't upset me. But that doesn't carry over to the work of others. The logical argument would go something like "I appreciate your photos/prints because you have made them in a way that I like to do it". It doesn't really add up - unless you take into account that you somehow implicitly assume something like "the way I do things must be better than other ways" or "I prefer to appreciate the work of those who think and work like me". To me, there's an element of arrogance embedded in that sort of reasoning, so it never really feels very comfortable to me.
 

Carnie Bob

Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2023
Messages
330
Location
Toronto , Ont Canada
Format
4x5 Format
View attachment 396678



For all intents and purposes - no, not really. A digital camera can generally record outside sRGB space, but then you still run into gamut issues when trying to display let alone print the images. For computer display, things have improved with monitors that offer a large gamut as well. However, even then, you'll only really notice the difference on a side-by-side comparison. Which, of course, can still be a compelling argument to get the latest & greatest. If it wouldn't matter at all, these advances wouldn't exist. Is it something to lose any sleep over? Hardly.



No, it isn't, but (1) it doesn't really matter, (2) going into the question why not would be unnecessarily technical. Your monitor will happily display whatever colors thrown at it, within the limits of its gamut. Whether the colors come out as they should is a question of running color management-aware software.

Nice chart - understanding this is important to me as it occurs many times when making separation negatives from digital files certain colours fall out of gamut when converted from Adobe 1998 to CMYK> there fore for tri colour gums we always edit our files for colour balance in CMYK profile so there is no lunch bag letdown. CMYK falls somewhere between srgb and adobe rgb
 

Carnie Bob

Member
Joined
Nov 5, 2023
Messages
330
Location
Toronto , Ont Canada
Format
4x5 Format
@logan2z @fdonadio how come you categorically prefer 'wet' prints? What makes you appreciate those prints to the extent that you will not accept the alternative? This question has been with me for some time. I've not been able to work it out entirely, I feel. Interested to hear what you guys make of it.

For me it boils down to the known permanence of certain materials that have examples dating back to the 1800's vs inkjet technology that still needs to stand the test of time. Most of the work I did was in colour between 1976 - 1996 dye coupler prints and they have all suffered tremendously and this fact has pushed me on to Gum over Palladium and Silver mantra.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom