Sleep is good and well deserved. I do the same thing if something is really bugging me, or more recently when something as gone very right, and I want to get back to printing ASAP. Done a few 3am print sessions. Sleep would have been better, but it was something that had to be done
Hi, at the end (15:30ish) you say that if we were doing it with inkjet, we couldn't measure and adjust. Couldn't you print a step wedge with an inkjet negative and then measure the values pm the print and make corrections (either manually using a spectrophotometer or by scanning and using the scripts Peter Mrhar wrote) using Excel? Thanks and sorry if this is a bozo question. I love your videos.
Hey man, Thank you for all the content. super helpful. I was wondering if you could help me with a question? I would like to do platinum palladium print on glass rather than paper. Do you know if I need to pre coat the glass with something Or is this something that won't work? Thank you in advance. Best wishes from London.
Firstly, many thanks for sharing your experience and talents with us! Next, question: what spec UV lights are necessary? Any tips for a DIY guy who’s going to make his own box?
Glad you got that figured out! I saw the first one was flat, but missed that you did 100%PD so that makes perfect sense. But man, you gotta get yourself a slider tray for the i1 and maybe some separator bars in that stepwedge image. Trying to do a 129-step target in single patch mode is going to make you want drink that potassium oxalate.
I can totally relate, I'll stay up all night printing trying to get something to come out, it's hard to throw in the towel
Sleep is good and well deserved. I do the same thing if something is really bugging me, or more recently when something as gone very right, and I want to get back to printing ASAP. Done a few 3am print sessions. Sleep would have been better, but it was something that had to be done
Hi, at the end (15:30ish) you say that if we were doing it with inkjet, we couldn't measure and adjust. Couldn't you print a step wedge with an inkjet negative and then measure the values pm the print and make corrections (either manually using a spectrophotometer or by scanning and using the scripts Peter Mrhar wrote) using Excel? Thanks and sorry if this is a bozo question. I love your videos.
Hey man, Thank you for all the content. super helpful. I was wondering if you could help me with a question? I would like to do platinum palladium print on glass rather than paper. Do you know if I need to pre coat the glass with something Or is this something that won't work? Thank you in advance. Best wishes from London.
Firstly, many thanks for sharing your experience and talents with us! Next, question: what spec UV lights are necessary? Any tips for a DIY guy who’s going to make his own box?
Glad you got that figured out! I saw the first one was flat, but missed that you did 100%PD so that makes perfect sense. But man, you gotta get yourself a slider tray for the i1 and maybe some separator bars in that stepwedge image. Trying to do a 129-step target in single patch mode is going to make you want drink that potassium oxalate.
Hopefully AI will help speed up tuning the correct profile in future, taking out some of the laborious work.
Thanks, Matt. I hope this means you get to sleep tonight.
Straitened your framed photos, man.