Re: difference hp Z2100 and Z3100
Re: difference hp Z2100 and Z3100
- Subject: Re: difference hp Z2100 and Z3100
- From: Marco Ugolini <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2007 00:23:55 -0700
In a message dated 3/20/07 7:56 AM, Anthony Sanna wrote:
>> Due to the tendency of OBs to yellow in time (not a desirable outcome for a
>> fine art print)
>
> This may sound like a dumb question, but.... If you start out with an
> optically brightened paper that yellows, or a yellowish paper that
> doesn't, what's the difference? I think that there was a country
> western song, once, about the similar, long-term benefits of an ugly wife.
That's a good question, one that I'm trying myself to get a good answers
for, because that is exactly the point to me as well: if the OBs fade in
time, then what is their long-term advantage in a paper that ends up looking
more like one without OBs?
And with "liver spots" too, according to some posts on this forum. Yuck...
That's why I was trying to sound an alarm in earlier messages about the
Hahnemuhle Fine Art Paper, which seems to me to be chock-full of OBs,
despite its manufacturer's claim that it is a paper for "fine artists".
Marco Ugolini
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