Yes, the black ink is the only one that changes between paper
surfaces. Matte Black gives a richer black on matte papers. You can
also use the Photo Black on matte papers, there's a profile for it
when selecting EEM in case you have Photo Black in the printer and
need to make an occasional print.
Godfrey
On Apr 21, 2006, at 4:28 PM, Juan Buhler wrote:
On 4/21/06, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It's a great printer for B&W. Go for it!
I was just reading old posts to the list about this printer. I can
feel the enablement coming...
I also just sold two prints, even before my show...
I guess I'll just transfer the money to Epson.
Darn you guys.
Just one more quick question: is the black (matte or black) the only
cartridge where there's a decision to make? From what I read I should
go with the matte black, right. I expect to be printing mostly on
Epson Enhanced Matte, maybe some on Somerset Velvet and stuff like
that.
j
--
Juan Buhler
Water Molotov: http://photoblog.jbuhler.com
Slippery Slope: http://color.jbuhler.com