File :-(, x, )
Silly questions... BurtGummer !!RRMHFHglFsy
A few more for you to yell the answers for:

Silver gelatin prints, do they look very different to standard prints?

If so, is the effect creatable in ye photoshoppe?
>> Anonymous
I'm laughing because for me silver gelatin prints ARE regular prints

If for you regular prints are ink jet (or some other fancy thing that is really just ink jet), then I have to say there is a difference - at least from the work I've seen. If someone else has send some system that can make prints that look as good as selenium toned prints done on fiber paper, I am all eyes and will check it out asap
>> heavyweather !4AIf7oXcbA
They've got sick black and white inks for the large format Epson printers. I think like 7 different tones and pigments? It's got a really great look. The color inks are just as good, I think they're at the point where they're making them better than chromogenic prints. Lots of fine art photographers are turning to printers to make their editions now, just because it's a whole lot cheaper, it's easier to color balance and work with, and the prints are really very archival. They're inks, so they don't really fade unless they're exposed to direct sun, and even then, slowly.

Oh and I think they'll handle toning too, using an additional color in the ink mix. This dude at Flatbed in Austin showed my class the whole process and a lot of the final product. We pixelpeeped on a blownup photoshop screen nearby and looked at the print side by side. Way cool. Another neat thing about the studio, the walls were all a neutral gray, lit very evenly. Absolutely perfect for screen viewing. It was so nice, I just love a good studio.

tl;dr rambling about prints and studios and bullshit while haah