RE: Epson Stylus Pro 9600 Extrachrome
RE: Epson Stylus Pro 9600 Extrachrome
- Subject: RE: Epson Stylus Pro 9600 Extrachrome
- From: "Mike Eddington" <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 17 Nov 2004 11:18:56 -0500
- Importance: Normal
<I am talking about an Epson 1280 print, on Epson glossy paper, that
looks one way under 5000K, another way (yet recognizably the same) under
tungsten but radically different, all of a sudden, for no apparent
readon, under window light?>
I haven't noticed this with Ultrachrome pigmented inks. Would this be
due to UV?
http://www.antelligent.com/pages/profiles/metamerism.htm
"Pigmented inks (such as used in Epson's 2000P, 7500, and 9500 series
printers(1)) may actually fluoresce under ultraviolet light, such as
sunlight. This tends to produce a green cast in sunlight, when the print
looks perfectly normal under incandescent light. 1)Epson has greatly
reduced the metamerism issue with their new Ultrachrome inks."
Would the same hold true for dye inks (The 1280 uses dyes inks,
correct)?
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