Longevity of inkjet Matte papers?
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Longevity of inkjet Matte papers?
| Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fadingthan glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matteon an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade inmy kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts abouta year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.adviceindicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, butCanon also offers a matte paper. |
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| Bill Tuthill wrote:> Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?> According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading> than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>> Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in> my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about> a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.>Epson HWM and Archival Matte / Enhanced Matte contain opticalbrighteners which degrade over time / exposure, causing a yellowingeffect (the paper becomes less \white\ looking when the OB effect isexpired. Read the fine print on the Wilhelm reports, and this is explained.A matte finish art paper without OB (Ultrasmooth Fine Art)may be betterfor long term display for that reason, but it's also expensive.The dye ink fading effect you see in your kitchen is probably gasfading. Wilhelm are testing for this with many standard paper/inkcombinations now. It's a problem far less likely to affect pigmentinks. Epson now list \gas fading resistance\ on their Japanese websitefor their new dye inksets. I don't know the test method they use, butdisplay rating is probably for a much less severe environment than akitchen.Heavyweight Matte is probably okay with Canon Dye inks. HWM wasn'tdesigned for pigment printers - it was for Epson dye printers. In factit doesn't work very well (poor saturation/resolution) with the pigmentprinters, even though it's included in the driver paper selection..But, if longevity is an issue, you are probably better using Canon paper- if some display permanence test data is available. It will probablyhave quite poor gas-fading resistance, so would need to be framed behindglass.As a general rule, if you want longevity on true matte papers, you needto use pigment inks. |
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| I believe it is very difficult to draw any valid conclusions about anyink, paper or printer without looking at all three together. A paper thatworks well in one printer - ink combination may not work well in another.Likewise for other combinations of the three factors.Now for longevity, I would say that the two meaningful factors are inkand paper, but some combinations of those two with different printers maygive unacceptable quality results.However for fading, you need to factor in the environment as the thirdfactor. What combinations work well in dark storage, may do poor in lightfor example. Different contaminates in the air can also make a difference.Having said that, I would not totally ignore the experience or testresults you may see. Just remember that different testing may lead todifferent results. It is a complex subject.--Joseph E. Meehan26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math\Bill Tuthill\ <ccreekin@yahoo.com> wrote in messagenews:4548f119@news.meer.net...> Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?> According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading> than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>> Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in> my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about> a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.> |
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| \Bill Tuthill\ <ccreekin@yahoo.com> wrote in messagenews:4548f119@news.meer.net...> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.It does matter. If you're in a position to take fading seriously,then you should probably be using pigment inks.The only alternative (such as it is) is to use papers with gelatinor swellable-polymer substrates. This was Epson's approachfor a while (the 1270/1280 series) and HP's approach on theDJ-30 and DJ-130 series.As others have noted, the paper can also degrade longevityif it's got optical brighteners in it.rafe bwww.terrapinphoto.com |
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| In article <4548f119@news.meer.net>, Bill Tuthill <ccreekin@yahoo.com>wrote:> Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?> According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading> than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>> Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in> my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about> a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.Prior to acquiring my R1800 I used a 1280 with dye inks, I havebrochures I made on HWM double sided paper that still look good severalyears later. All my Epson HWM prints using dyes still look good. Butmany on other paper have varying results. Some would have been terribleif I had actually sold the prints. Some of the glossy papers displayedshowed signs of out gassing several months after displaying mattedbehind glass.So far using the pigment inks of the R1800 I have been very pleasedwith color vibrance.--\As democracy is perfected, the office represents, more and more closely,the inner soul of the people. We move toward a lofty ideal. On some greatand glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desireat last, and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron.\- H. L. Mencken, in the Baltimore Sun, July 26, 1920.Reality-Is finding that perfect pictureand never looking back.www.gregblankphoto.com |
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| Unfortunately, there is really no hard and fast rule when it comes topapers. The paper's construction, as well as the ink type are criticalto the fade resistance.For example, using Epson dye inks I have some Tektronix inkjet paperthat was made probably over 12 years ago. It was designed for theirinkjet plotters. It came in rolls but unfortunately it is rather thin,but whatever mordants and other technologies they used with it, theimages I printed on it with literally first generation Epson color inkshave stood up to fairly harsh indoor lighting for 8-10 years now withonly moderate loss of yellow and cyan. On the other hand, using thesame inks, an older HP matte paper (designed for the original inkjetprinter/plotter models) faded badly in a matter of months in brightfluorescent exposure. The older Epson \photo quality\ matte paperdidn't fare a heck of a lot better (maybe twice as long), however, the\heavy weight archival matte\ has don't much better. The older Epsonphoto a medium gloss paper lost cyans almost completely with exposure tobright indoor lighting in a matter of a couple of years.Sadly, other than real or accelerated testing, I don't think one canmake any generalization about any inkjet paper, other than to say thatswellable polymer papers tend to give longer lasting results thanmicroporous.ArtBill Tuthill wrote:> Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?> According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading> than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>> Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in> my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about> a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters. Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.> |
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| Greg <grey_egg@greg_photo.com> wrote:>> Some of the glossy Epson papers ... showed signs of out gassing> several months after displaying matted behind glass.Why anybody would go to the trouble of matting and glass-frame mountinga dye-based Epson inkjet print, is beyond my comprehension. I hope youdon't take that as a personal insult.Pigment-based Epson prints could be a different matter, but I suspectthey react poorly to being placed in direct sunlight, unlike RA-4 prints(photo paper) which can survive many years in sunlight without fading.Note how Wilhelm tests under fluorescent light, the best possible conditionfor inkjet longevity, perhaps because he's paid by inkjet manufacturers.My personal experience says Epson 1280 prints on Photo Paper degrade about10 times faster in sunlight than under fluorescent light. |
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Bill Tuthill wrote:> Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?> According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading> than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.It's always a little curious how users \report many years\ when the printerthey are reporting on has only existed for about a year. > Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in> my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about> a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters.Yes. That matters.Dye-based inks are simply nowhere near as stable as the pigment-based inksused by the 2400 and large-format Epson printers.Some net.advice> indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but> Canon also offers a matte paper.--Images (Plus Snaps & Grabs) by Mark² at:www.pbase.com/markuson |
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In rec.photo.digital \Mark²\ <mjmorgan(lowest even number here)@cox..net> wrote:>> Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte>> on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>> It's always a little curious how users \report many years\ when the printer > they are reporting on has only existed for about a year. Sorry, I meant \Epson 1280\ but neglected to back-correct my post.>> I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters.>> Yes. That matters.> Dye-based inks are simply nowhere near as stable as the pigment-based inks > used by the 2400 and large-format Epson printers.Right. I'm not about to buy another Epson product, I just wanted to knowwhich Matte paper might offer the best longevity with Canon inks. |
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| I've had fairly good luck with Ilford Classic Pearl. I couldn't quantifythe length of time before fading, I really don't have any prints thathaven't been stored in boxes, in plastic sleeve and in a portfolio or mattedand framed behind glass. I have one printed on Lumiquest Master Canvas thathasn't faded in over a year. We use Epson Matte Heavyweight for proofbooks, but those aren't exposed to much sunlight, either. Works well, asfar as we can tell with our Canon S9000.--Skip Middletonwww.shadowcatcherimagery.comwww.pbase.com/skipm |
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| \Bill Tuthill\ <ccreekin@yahoo.com> wrote:>>>>>>>>>>>>Right. I'm not about to buy another Epson product, I just wanted to knowwhich Matte paper might offer the best longevity with Canon inks.<<<<<<<<<<<<Canon makes a 13x19\ pigment-ink inkjet. Unlike the Epson 2400, it doesn'trequire a cartridge change to switch between matte and glossy. (In exchangefor which, it only has one gray ink (i.e. gray + black) as opposed to the2400's two grays (light gray, gray, black).HP is also making pigment-ink printers as well.If you care about fading, using dye inks is a bad idea.I wonder what Wilhelm found to be the worst-case pigment ink + papercombination was???http://www.wilhelm-research.com/ist..._2006_09_HW.pdfThe answer is that the worst pigment ink + paper combination (61 years) isbetter than the best wet-photographic process print _under UV-cut glass_ (49years).David J. LittleboyTokyo, Japan |
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| \Bill Tuthill\ <ccreekin@yahoo.com> wrote in messagenews:454a9ff1@news.meer.net...>Right. I'm not about to buy another Epson product, I just wanted to know>which Matte paper might offer the best longevity with Canon inks.----Heh. I've owned the following inkjet printers in the following order.I've been all over the map... and right back to Epson.1. Epson 600 (ca. 1998)* finally tossed it about a year ago2. Epson 750 (~1999)* a friend owns it now. still works, AFAIK3. Epson 1160, new (~2001)4. another Epson 1160, store demo* One of these died after heavy use w/ MIS pigment inksin a CIS. The other was given up for dead, but sold tosomeone who managed to restore it. There was a whilewhen both were active, side by side.5. Canon S9000 (~2002)* Died after about 1.5 years of use with MIS dye inksin a CIS. Micro-banding even on the best days.6. HP DesignJet 30 (~2004)* Sold on eBay after 1 year. Basically worked OK,but longevity happens only on HP media, which sucks.Shoddy paper handlig. HP service sucks.7. Epson 7000* bought on eBay, still working fine with Epson dye inksIt was ~3 years old when I bought it in 2004.8. Epson R1800* first pigment-ink Epson I've owned. I love it (so far.)Epson still owns the fine-art/photographic inkjet market.All the others are playing catch-up. Not to say Epsonhasn't made its share of mistakes or acted arrogantly.Canon and HP have some interesting products, andit's great that they're in the market -- if only to keepEpson on their toes.rafe bwww.terrapinphoto.com |
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| I find you comments as biased as those you claim Wilhelm is making.Firstly, an extra glass layer (window glass is the first one in mostcases, can significantly cut UV levels contacting the print, whether dyeor pigment, and since UV activation is a considerable environmentalinfluence, especially on dye inks, it is completely logical to place dyeink prints under glass.Secondly, as far as outgassing goes, the Epson (can't speak for others)Ultrachrome pigment colorant inks have more glycols in them than thedye versions, to slow drying and prevent clogging, and they thereforetend to outglass more and longer than dye ink prints do.Finally, direct sunlight is not considered by anyone as a legitimatetest for fading of fine art images. It may be for housepaint or outdoorbanners, but it is not the way prints are supposed to be displayed.Fluorescent lighting is a very logical light source because it is verytypical indoor lighting, and it is much more antagonistic thanincandescent light which contains almost no UV.ArtBill Tuthill wrote:> Greg <grey_egg@greg_photo.com> wrote:>>>Some of the glossy Epson papers ... showed signs of out gassing>>several months after displaying matted behind glass.>>> Why anybody would go to the trouble of matting and glass-frame mounting> a dye-based Epson inkjet print, is beyond my comprehension. I hope you> don't take that as a personal insult.>> Pigment-based Epson prints could be a different matter, but I suspect> they react poorly to being placed in direct sunlight, unlike RA-4 prints> (photo paper) which can survive many years in sunlight without fading.>> Note how Wilhelm tests under fluorescent light, the best possible condition> for inkjet longevity, perhaps because he's paid by inkjet manufacturers.> My personal experience says Epson 1280 prints on Photo Paper degrade about> 10 times faster in sunlight than under fluorescent light.> |
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I have owned Epson color inkjet printers almost since they came outabout 10 years ago. I have many prints I made with those very firstmodels, which all used dye inks. I have prints displayed on my walls(mainly under glass, but some not, which have been in medium householdlighting for at least 8 years, and with the right paper (in this casethe Tektronix I wrote about earlier) the ones under glass have shownminimal fading. The ones without glass has shown moderate fading.Using the same inks with other papers, I have had considerably poorerresults. The paper is critical to fading issues. I still have no ideawhat Tektronix did with this paper that makes it so resistant to fadingwith those inks.ArtMark² wrote:> Bill Tuthill wrote:>>>Anybody have words of wisdom about longevity of inkjet Matte papers?>>According to Wilhelm's testing they are more durable against fading>>than glossy \Photo\ papers. Friends who use Epson Heavyweight Matte>>on an Epson 2400 report many years of non-fading display.>>> It's always a little curious how users \report many years\ when the printer> they are reporting on has only existed for about a year. >>>>Whereas Epson Photo Paper with Epson dye-based inks starts to fade in>>my kitchen (filtered sunlight) within months, although it lasts about>>a year in my office (flourescent lights) before I notice cyan fading.>>>>I'm using Canon CLI dye-based inks, if that matters.>>> Yes. That matters.> Dye-based inks are simply nowhere near as stable as the pigment-based inks> used by the 2400 and large-format Epson printers.>>>> Some net.advice>>>indicates Epson Heavyweight Matte is fine with Canon printers, but>>Canon also offers a matte paper.>> |
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| Is that the new Canon with the 12 cartridges?I agree that people seem to think that wet color process is some magicalpermanent media that doesn't fade. Some wet prints have under a decadebefore major fading using Wilhelm's testing, and as you say, others lastupward of 40+ years with glass.Fuji does claim their newer wet lab media are more fade resistance, andthey may be, but pigment inks can still probably surpass them.ArtDavid J. Littleboy wrote:> \Bill Tuthill\ <ccreekin@yahoo.com> wrote:>> Right. I'm not about to buy another Epson product, I just wanted to know> which Matte paper might offer the best longevity with Canon inks.> <<<<<<<<<<<<>> Canon makes a 13x19\ pigment-ink inkjet. Unlike the Epson 2400, it doesn't> require a cartridge change to switch between matte and glossy. (In exchange> for which, it only has one gray ink (i.e. gray + black) as opposed to the> 2400's two grays (light gray, gray, black).>> HP is also making pigment-ink printers as well.>> If you care about fading, using dye inks is a bad idea.>> I wonder what Wilhelm found to be the worst-case pigment ink + paper> combination was???>> http://www.wilhelm-research.com/ist..._2006_09_HW.pdf>> The answer is that the worst pigment ink + paper combination (61 years) is> better than the best wet-photographic process print _under UV-cut glass_ (49> years).>> David J. Littleboy> Tokyo, Japan>> |
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