Derek Zeanah
Member
I know this is a really vague question, but I'm at that point in my life where it's time to get back into printing in-house rather than sending out to MPIX, and I mostly care about B&W, so I'm looking for the least expensive way to get into Piezo prints so I can start learning inexpensively. Subject matter is a mix of portraits, travel photographs, and (maybe soon some more) wedding work.
My problem: I've never seen Piezography output, and all of my experience is with traditional fiber and RC papers. I liked glossy fiber-based prints, but generally found glossy RC prints were a bit too reflective and scratched too easily. Is it possible to use that as a frame of reference to tell me how matte papers using Piezography look?
I'm asking because the cheapest way into the system is an Epson 1430, but it's limited to matte only.
Thanks.
My problem: I've never seen Piezography output, and all of my experience is with traditional fiber and RC papers. I liked glossy fiber-based prints, but generally found glossy RC prints were a bit too reflective and scratched too easily. Is it possible to use that as a frame of reference to tell me how matte papers using Piezography look?
I'm asking because the cheapest way into the system is an Epson 1430, but it's limited to matte only.
Thanks.