What does "visually defeated their considerable expense" mean? Interpreting those words is a challenge I'm not up to....several attempts to modernize carbon like the Polaroid Permanent process, Evercolor, and Ultrastable relied on halftone techniques that visually defeated their considerable expense trying to simulate more conventional forms of prints...
In post #16 I describe an Evercolor print. That print does as well as any I've ever seen of duplicating the experience one gets looking at the transparency it was made from on a light box. And I've seen all kinds of prints from that transparency, including dye transfers made by the photographer, who was a friend of Eliot Porter. In fact, I prevailed upon the photographer to have this Evercolor print made because, in my opinion, dye transfer prints are so inherently unsharp that the advantages one realizes from starting with a large format transparency are wasted. I also rejected Cibachrome/Ilfochrome options as aesthetically unacceptable due to their garish surface gloss. In my opinion they have all the beauty of a polyurethane-coated velvet Elvis....One of these processes was ridiculed as having " all the beauty of a plastic place mat", and did indeed resemble a laminated halftone poster...
"Art" is a word that means whatever the person using it wants it to mean. Which means it's a meaningless word. The OP's question was not whether color photographs 'deserve' to last a long time, but why that poster is aware of no processes that do last half a millennium. In post #4, Oren answered the question. In post #16, I provided an example that supports Oren's answer. Casting aspersions on accurate responses while pontificating about things unrelated to the question adds nothing to what should be a useful thread for the PHOTRIO archive....Everybody thinks their art deserves to last forever...
Digital prints are also subject to all of the faults of other color imaging but in addition, they suffer from smear, which is a loss in sharpness due to humidity causing the dyes to spread out. This is often glossed over by the digital image equipment manufacturers.
And I have seen some sharp dye transfer prints, even big ones. Take a look at the work of John Warzonek, an East Coast fellow who breifly attempted to keep Evercolor going there....
You just removed the UV blocking layer!...
One print I thought was fading was of my daughter on he graduation day, but on closer inspection it was the glass in the frame was simply covered with dust that could not be removed with a simple wipe over with a duster. Removing the glass and washing it cured that.
I have great respect for the West Coast individuals behind the whole attempt to modernize carbon. I don't know if more than two of them are still alive. But Evercolor suffered horribly from its blocked-up gamut. Joseph Holmes could explain this in terms of the inherent software glitch far better than I can; but to me it looked intolerable due to the sheer lack of transparency of the pigments, even worse than inkjet in this respect. It was derived from an Agfa proofing process. Everyone has their taste issues; and Sal, you kinda remind me of Ctein, who can't stand the gloss of Ciba either. But there are certainly times that gloss can work for an image. It's like everything else, where one shoe does not fit all. I employ different paper sheens, based on the particular image and display circumstances. And I have seen some sharp dye transfer prints, even big ones. Take a look at the work of John Warzonek, an East Coast fellow who breifly attempted to keep Evercolor going there. No, not loupe sharp like a Ciba or Fuji Supergloss print, but sharp enough to sink your stereotype. In this case, a bit of dye bleeding can be a blessing in disguise, hiding registration problems which many workers did not take the extra effort to control. My situation is a bit tricker. I do have superb registration gear, but now that dye transfer papers have to be hand-made, it can be harder to control bleeding. The Kodak paper relied on a double mordant, one of which was radioactive. But I am also influenced by Vermeer, who understood how our vision is not itself perfect. It has always intrigued me if a process like dye transfer can simulate that kind of work. Soft-focus lenses and shallow focus effects certainly can't, just something else entirely. But I don't know if I have enough time or dye transfer supplies left to get that far. Probably not. I have seen handmade color carbon prints of great beauty. But as a long-time strategist of precisely controlling the picture plane, it bothers me that in carbon transfer, warm hues which we naturally respond to as advancing are found in the pits of the sandwiched emulsion, while cold tones advance. The most idiosyncratic of the commercialized pigment processes, Fresson, can be stunning for a certain variety of very grainy image, but again is not a suitable shoe for much we do. At least it looks unique. Most inkjet prints seem to me neither fish nor fowl - wannabee prints trying to look like continuous tone photographs, but not quite there.
The Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable prints Oren commented about and I described an example of are completely pigment based. No dyes. Not "inkjet."...Digital prints are also subject to all of the faults of other color imaging but in addition, they suffer from smear, which is a loss in sharpness due to humidity causing the dyes to spread out...
"Loupe sharp" is a phrase used to pooh pooh an aesthetic preference for high levels of sharpness. Dye transfer, no matter who the practitioner, is/was less sharp than not just Cibachrome/Ilfrochrome prints, but other prints on 'standard' media such as RA-4. For those who want sharp, that's unacceptable....Take a look at the work of John Warzonek, an East Coast fellow who breifly attempted to keep Evercolor going there. No, not loupe sharp like a Ciba or Fuji Supergloss print, but sharp enough to sink your stereotype...
Great argument for dye transfer's inherent unsharpness. It covers up bad printing practice....In this case, a bit of dye bleeding can be a blessing in disguise, hiding registration problems which many workers did not take the extra effort to control...
The Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable prints Oren commented about and I described an example of are completely pigment based. No dyes. Not "inkjet."
The EverColor print on my wall is sharper than any dye transfer print ever made. Halftone dots aren't conspicuous; they are far smaller than grain of the scanned film and not evident, even with one's nose on the print.Yeah, but both Polaroid Permanent and Evercolor had conspicuous halftone dots and weren't critically sharp at all...
This is an aesthetic, not technical, opinion. In my aesthetic opinion, almost any other print makes a Cibachrome/Ilforchrome ultra-saturated, ultra-glossy abomination look horrible. To each his or her own....ordered a few Evercolor prints from his chromes but they looked absolutely horrible compared to the Cibas he made at home...
I've been to the place pictured on my wall. The greens in that print look exactly like the greens in nature there look....The greens looked like sign paint...
It didn't take the banning of cadmium to put Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable out of business. Their demise happened because of the market's unwillingness to pay their cost plus the unmet challenge of repeatability.Technical improvements in digital equipment over the last two decades make me confident that whatever obstacles Berger/Nordstrom faced could have been overcome by now. I'm equally certain that there still wouldn't be enough customers willing to pay for pigment prints to keep the businesses going. Heck, fewer and fewer people are printing using any process, even the ubiquitous inkjet. Who needs more than a JPEG displayed on their phone in 2018?...name me one permanent process yellow that doesn't involve cadmium...
The Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable prints Oren commented about and I described an example of are completely pigment based. No dyes. Not "inkjet."
I suspect that neither you, nor I, nor even the youngest PHOTRIO member reading this thread has enough time left alive to see either smear or fade in the EverColor print hanging on my wall.Only time will tell.
PE
On Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable prints? If so, please do share the results.There are accelerated tests that may show the result pretty well though. I've run many of them myself.
PE
On Polaroid Permanent / EverColor / UltraStable prints? If so, please do share the results.![]()
You just removed the UV blocking layer!
PS...the painting used as an example by the OP was restored in 1995/96...it probably would have been a lot cheaper to just print another one...
thanks vaughn !Small correction, John.
.....it's extremely labor-intensive, and requires a fair amount of experience to do it well consistently......
...I have heard that 98% of film shot through the early 2000s was C-41...
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