1. Going to black ink only (as suggested in another post) may cure the color
problem but it will result in a grainy print. These printers are designed
to print using all colors to obtain smooth tonality. That said, it is
difficult to obtain a true neutral black on these printers.
2. Don't confuse the ratio of colors in channel mixer with the shade of
black (blue, purple or whatever cast) in the print. The color cast in the
print is a result of the printer printing "profile". Worse, the color inks,
when mixed to produce black and white, tend to exhibit "metamerism", which
mean that the color cast changes depending on the light source used to view
the print.
3. If you want to continue to use the1280. it may be best to convert it to
B & W inks exclusively, as suggested in another post.
4. Perhaps the best option, if you don't mind spending the money, is to get
a printer that handles B & W better. I use an Epson 2200, and print using
Colorbyte Software's "ImagePrint" product. This is a Raster Image Processor
(RIP) that does produce outstanding B & W prints without metamerism, and
excellent color as well. The down side is cost. The printer is > $500, and
the RIP is about $500 for the lite version (which is all you need). There
is also another product available (basically a profile, I believe) that is
much cheaper and can produce good B & W from the 2200 but does not address
color.
Good luck.
"embee" <noot67.RemoveThis@yahoo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:1102845140.20569.0@spandrell.news.uk.clara.net...
> Hi, I've been experimenting with black and white printing using my Epson
> 1280 printer and I am unhappy with the results. I've noticed my prints
have
> a distinct blue tinge in grey areas and I recently printed an A3 sized
> mozaic of more than 160 BW crops from pictures of a recent holiday which
> really is very blue when viewed under daylight (although it's not as
> noticable under tungsten light).
>
> I made the pictures black and white using the Monochrome option under the
> Channel Mixer in Photoshop 7. I kept the Blue Channel input to a minimum
> because looking at the Channels, blue is the worst channel. A typical
> picture would be about 40 per cent red, 50 per cent Green and 10 per cent
> blue and they look fine on the screen.
>
> Is the blueness due to the limitations of my printer for Black and White
> printing? I'm happy with my colour prints, but Black and White just lacks
> any impact and is too blue. Before I give up completely and take my black
> and whites to a printing lab in future, can anybody explain what is going
> on?
>
> Thanks
>
><!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
>> Stay informed about: Black and White (and Blue)