Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Did you miss your
activation email?
May 21, 2013, 12:52:21 PM
Home
Help
Search
Register
Login
Luminous Landscape Home
Luminous Landscape Forum
>
Raw & Post Processing, Printing
>
Printers, Papers and Inks
>
r1800 or r2400
Pages: [
1
]
Bottom of Page
Print
Author
Topic: r1800 or r2400 (Read 2048 times)
hovis
Jr. Member
Offline
Posts: 79
r1800 or r2400
«
on:
May 14, 2006, 09:53:15 PM »
Reply
Hi
I intend to buy a printer to produce reproduction prints of my drawings, can anyone tell me which printer (r1800 or r2400) would be best suited to this job, I read that the r1800 has a greater colour gamut while the r2400 has greater tonal subtlety. I'll be using an archival fine art paper (although I'm undecided as to which) the drawings aren't glossly so I'm concerned how the high gloss inks in the r1800 will look on this kind of paper. I've included a image of the kind of work I'd like to reproduce.
Thanks
Jon[attachment=565:attachment]
Logged
drew
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 477
r1800 or r2400
«
Reply #1 on:
May 15, 2006, 07:18:26 AM »
Reply
I really think you are unlikely to see much difference between these two printers for printing on matte media. The gloss optimiser cartridge on the R1800 only comes into play when printing onto glossy/semi-glossy resin-coated media. The R1800 has red and blue inks in its ink set while the R2400 has the more usual CcMmY configuration , but with three blacks (K, LK and LLK). In theory, this should make the R2400 a slighlty better photographic printer, although in practice, the differences are likely to be very small. Given that the R1800 is significantly cheaper, I would have thought that that is the one you should be looking at first. Both use ultrachrome inks.
Logged
Andrew Richards
My Webpage
Geoff Wittig
Sr. Member
Offline
Posts: 1017
r1800 or r2400
«
Reply #2 on:
May 15, 2006, 01:59:40 PM »
Reply
The 2400 has more subtle tonal rendition and does a far, far better job with black & white printing. Its profiles are also a bit more sophisticated. The 1800 provides more neon color on glossy papers, about its only advantage, for less initlal $.
Logged
hovis
Jr. Member
Offline
Posts: 79
r1800 or r2400
«
Reply #3 on:
May 20, 2006, 07:14:27 AM »
Reply
thanks guys, for both of your responses.
Regards
Jon
Logged
Pages: [
1
]
Top of Page
Print
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Site & Board Matters
-----------------------------
=> About This Site
=> LL Video Journal & Download Video
-----------------------------
Raw & Post Processing, Printing
-----------------------------
=> Adobe Camera Raw Q&A
=> Adobe Lightroom Q&A
=> Apple Aperture Q&A
=> Capture One Q&A
=> Other Raw Converters
=> Colour Management
=> Digital Image Processing
=> Printers, Papers and Inks
-----------------------------
Equipment & Techniques
-----------------------------
=> Landscape & Nature Photography
=> Landscape Photography Locations
=> Compact System Cameras
=> Cameras, Lenses and Shooting gear
=> Medium Format / Film / Digital Backs – and Large Sensor Photography
=> Pro Business Discussion
=> Digital Cameras & Shooting Techniques
=> Digital Asset Management
=> Motion & Video
=> Combocams
=> Computers & Peripherals
=> The Wet Darkroom
=> Digital Projection Tools and Techniques
=> For Sale
=> Beginner's Questions
-----------------------------
The Art of Photography
-----------------------------
=> Discussing Photographic Styles
=> But is it Art?
=> User Critiques
=> The Coffee Corner
Loading...