Print Pricing and Technical Issues

 

The photos marked 5 mpx were taken with a Contax TVS Digital, that incorporates a superb Carl Zeiss lens. It supplies 5 mpx of data in .jpg format. I've made very good 13" x 19" prints from these files. At that size, the tiniest bit of artifacting might be noticeable, but framed and hung, most people won't notice it.

The photos marked 7 mpx were taken with a Canon G6. It supplies 7 mpx of data in RAW format (better than jpg). It will make superb 13" x 19" prints and a very good 16" x 20", with slight artifacting.

The photos marked 'film' were shot on transparency film, and because of the nature of film, prints could be made any size.

8-1/2" x 11", 13" x 19", and 16 x 20" prints will be output digitally on a Epson Stylus Pro 4000 printer. The Epson 4000 uses eight separate Ultrachrome inks that surpass traditional wet dyes in longevity. My workflow is profiled and calibrated from start to finish. Don't confuse a print that comes from this workflow with what your Aunt Sarah gets from her $99 printer!

Normally I use high quality glossy or semi-gloss paper made by Epson or Ilford. If you prefer a cotton rag based art matte paper, I am currently using Moab's Entrada Natural 190 gsm.

8-1/2" x 11", $20

13" x 19", $30

16" x 20", $40

Add 30% if you insist on having film-sourced prints done in a darkroom by a pro lab.

Add $5 shipping USA, cost international.

Questions, denton@speakeasy.net

And whether or not you choose to buy a print, thank you for stopping by!