Canon printers have a magenta cast, as you had mentioned. that may be a completely erroneous memory.ĭan - Epson prints do have a bit of a green cast in B&W when you let Photoshop / Lightroom manage the colours and it goes away when one lets the printer manage colours. I would have to dig up the old thread with Andrew Rodney, but I have a very, very vague recollection that the color cast on that OP's Epson, using the wrong settings, was green. I have had no recurrence of the problem since then. I changed to the settings above, and the problem vanished. I mentioned in the other post that I had seen a slight magenta color casts in B&W prints I made on my old Pixma Pro 100 (or perhaps my even older Pixma Pro 9000 II). In the case of Canon, what is required is telling the firmware that it is B&W and then setting the printing software to let the printer control the color. I have read elsewhere about the Epson Advanced Black and White mode (Andrew Rodney referenced it in another forum), but as I have never printed with an Epson printer, I know nothing about it. But in my experience this approach provides the best solution for creating excellent black and white prints with minimal effort. The particulars of using the advanced options for black and white printing will vary, of course, from one printer manufacturer to the next, and even from one printer model to the next. This mode provides you with a simple option for achieving extremely accurate black and white prints, including the ability to achieve truly neutral prints without any hint of color. Then, you need to configure the black and white printing mode with your printer's software.įor example, with your Epson R2880, you have an option to use the Advanced Black-and-White Photo Mode, which I highly recommend. This generally calls for using the option to let the printer manage the color, rather than having Photoshop or Lightroom perform this task. Instead, I generally recommend taking advantage of the rather advanced options for optimizing black and white prints using the printer software. And, of course, printing with only the black ink, even if combined with one or more shades of "light black" ink, will result in a print that has a much smaller number of possible tonal values, resulting in gradations that aren't as smooth as they could be or a loss of detail in some areas. That won't solve the color issue for printers that use colored inks to create black and white images. This is because the primary focus of a black and white profile, from my perspective at least, is to linearize the printed data, helping to ensure that tonal values are represented properly. However, I don't generally consider this to be an ideal solution when it comes to dealing with a color cast in black and white prints. All are can be produced with incomparable framing, ready to hang unframed, or as a paper, print to be completed at your leisure.Tim's Answer: There is such a thing as a black and white profile, which is more commonly referred to as a grayscale profile. Like all of the other prints available online here this Black and White luxury art is available in a variety of artistic presentations from the most modern Acrylic, Canvas, Metal, wood mounted Plaq to the classic rag, fine art paper print. Modern Classic Black and White luxury fine art landscape photography prints. In the digital darkroom, I can bring to life a picture by using my vision and tools that are only available in Black and White editing thus taking the fine art print a step away from reality and into the realm of art. Cameras are tools that have no consciousness or feeling. Black and White photography allows me to be more creative by tuning the luminance values of light and shadows within a photograph thus controlling the visual mood of a print. The master artworks you see in these galleries have been developed with the full attention to the vast tonal range available in a Black and White images.īlack and white photography gives me the freedom to express my vision and creativity by creating visual depth. These quality black and white pieces of photographic art are more than just converted color pictures that have had a photoshop filter applied. Here you can view, learn more about, and purchase true luxury fine art landscape photography prints as created by Jess Lee. The images you see here have been conceived to be classic black and white fine art prints. The Black and White landscape photography represented for sale in this gallery are the best fine art, luxury, large sized black and white photography prints available today. Why Black and White Landscape Photography?
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