Paul Verizzo
Print Addict
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2011
- Messages
- 427
- Reaction score
- 88
- Points
- 173
- Location
- Sarasota, FL, USA
- Printer Model
- Canon ip4500, 9000 MK II, PRO-
Long time lurker, decided to make some observations and share them.
We've all heard that you can't get perfect blacks from using the colored inks in combination. Well, that was my experience, too, until recently when I got a new Pro 9000. It was the first time I had a factory OEM inkset in a long, long time. And since I now needed 13x19 paper, I ordered the glossy Photo Paper Plus II since it has the alleged longest image life. (You gotta dig for this stuff in the hard to find Chromalife pages.) I've liked the Canon semi-gloss, in fact, that's my preferred gloss level, generally.
Without any corrections or manipulations, I threw an image with huge amounts of black background at the 9000. Three minutes later I was looking at a stunning, perfectly black image background.
Since then, I've run test images with Ilford Classic and Smooth, Arista II (I think it's Premier Imaging), HP Photo Paper, a cheap high def matte, and the Canon Semi-Gloss. In terms of B&W accuracy, only the Canon Semi-Gloss and HP come (very) close. The Ilford Smooth did very well after using the suggested changes of -15 yellow and +5 intensity.
On my go-to Canon Pixma ip4300 printer with MIS inks, the color is pretty bad. Correction, our eyes adjust to accept a lot of color variance. But in gray scale, the differences jump. But that's another post........
I guess I'm going to have to choke up and buy the OEM inks or else spend as much on custom ICC profiles. Quite the admission from a guy that's been refilling for almost 15 years with a Canon BJC-600.
We've all heard that you can't get perfect blacks from using the colored inks in combination. Well, that was my experience, too, until recently when I got a new Pro 9000. It was the first time I had a factory OEM inkset in a long, long time. And since I now needed 13x19 paper, I ordered the glossy Photo Paper Plus II since it has the alleged longest image life. (You gotta dig for this stuff in the hard to find Chromalife pages.) I've liked the Canon semi-gloss, in fact, that's my preferred gloss level, generally.
Without any corrections or manipulations, I threw an image with huge amounts of black background at the 9000. Three minutes later I was looking at a stunning, perfectly black image background.
Since then, I've run test images with Ilford Classic and Smooth, Arista II (I think it's Premier Imaging), HP Photo Paper, a cheap high def matte, and the Canon Semi-Gloss. In terms of B&W accuracy, only the Canon Semi-Gloss and HP come (very) close. The Ilford Smooth did very well after using the suggested changes of -15 yellow and +5 intensity.
On my go-to Canon Pixma ip4300 printer with MIS inks, the color is pretty bad. Correction, our eyes adjust to accept a lot of color variance. But in gray scale, the differences jump. But that's another post........
I guess I'm going to have to choke up and buy the OEM inks or else spend as much on custom ICC profiles. Quite the admission from a guy that's been refilling for almost 15 years with a Canon BJC-600.