Apr 22 2010

Visual Art Sells: How to Select Fine Art Media for Reproductions

What makes art sell? Why are some artists making millions of dollars while others struggling to afford paint brushes? While there are many factors involved in the prosperity of one artist to another, by far the most critical is the aesthetic appeal the artwork itself. Simply put, the more visually appealing a particular work of art is, the better it will sell. Whether art is being shown as originals or prints, in a gallery or at an art show, the consumer is primarily influenced by the visual appeal of their prospective purchase and subsequently, its perceived value.

Publishers, printmakers, framers, gallery owners, and of course the artists themselves all (directly or indirectly) profit from art sales. Collectively they share a common goal of selling art; while individually they strive to create a rich environment for art sales to take place, at the greatest possible rate. The artist creates the most visually appealing rendition of their art possible so consumers will be drawn to it, the publisher prints the best possible catalogue to increase exposure and prestige; framer matches the art with a frame that becomes an visual extension of the painting, and the printmaker produces the most vibrant, accurate, and sellable print possible through equipment selection, experience, and talent. While each of these players is involved in the overall sell-ability of art, the purpose of this article is to focus on the printmaker and his/her influence on the visual appeal of a fine art reproduction.

As a printmaker there are an overwhelming amount of variables involved in reproducing a sellable print. Aside from experience, knowledge, and raw talent, which are extremely important, a profitable printmaker learns to intelligently blend controllable variables with uncontrollable variables to reproduce the best possible prints. Controllable variables are aspects of the process that can be objectively defined in absolutes values. For example, a printmaker can determine the absolute highest black density (DMAX) or widest color gamut that a particular substrate or ink is able to achieve, thus creating the most visually appealing print. These data are measurable facts, not a matter of opinion. Uncontrollable variables are also a key contributing factor in creating the visual appeal and sale-ability of an art reproduction. Unlike the controllable variables, these rely primarily on subjective opinions such as media weight, thickness, white-point, texture, and substrate type. While many artists have preconceived preferences, the most successful printmakers are those who influence this process with personal experience and industry knowledge of market trends. Mark Leftoff, President of Gallery Street (www.gallerystreet.com) in Atlanta, GA provides some recommendation on how to add as some objectivity to this process.

“First, select a media type and finish that, based upon the history of successful art pieces, will best suit a particular image. We typically recommend canvas first because with a higher perceived value to the end consumer, it can be sold at a higher price or in greater volume which in turn creates more financial reward for our customers. If a customer prefers to use matte fine art paper, we may even print some small swatches on different media in order to find a fit for their image that we all believe will result in the most success. We encourage our customers to test market these samples by getting some opinions from a handful of their own customers who will be buying the art. We believe that by including more professionals in the process we can minimize risk and more accurately assess the marketability of every print. It is in this manner that we work alongside our customers and together make educated business decisions on how to select the best media for every print job.”

The most successful printmakers typically select a standard “in house” media based upon objective testing and industry experience. Most have chosen a smooth fine art paper, a velvet finish paper, a heavily textured paper, and a canvas or two. A couple of different weights and finish are usually offered as well. This enables them to accurately match the proper media type, texture and weight, with a particular image to maximize sell-ability. It is also important for the artist to offer a couple of different options to their prospective art buyers/gallery owners to determine the most sellable option. When selecting which brand of media to permanently offer to their artists, these decisions are based upon controllable variables or hard facts such as determining which substrate produces the best colors, the best blacks, shows the best detail, and will last the longest.

“By far the most important considerations in using any given fine art media on the market are color and longevity. This means that above all, our media must be measurably superior in achieving the widest color gamut and highest Dmax possible. In this business, color can make you or break you. This guarantees MFA Talon Graphics that the paper we are using produces the best color on our reproductions. Then we must consider how long the color will last without fading or yellowing. MFA Talon Graphics chooses fine art media from a ‘quality in, quality out’ perspective. This is how we continually deliver on our promise to our customers,” says Teddy Blah (Head Printmaker at MFA Talon Graphics of El Segundo, CA).

While many printmakers may wrestle with the decision of which media to stock, or learn through a process of trial and error, the most profitable and experienced printmakers understand one important fact – art sells based upon how it looks. Those who offer a wide range of high-performance substrates and have the industry knowledge and market experience to suggest which substrate is most suitable or sellable with a particular image will be the most profitable. By offering substandard media or selecting the wrong substrate for a particular image, not only are you devaluing your own quality and expertise as a printmaker, but also that of the artists themselves. This will inevitably result in the loss of printing business to a competitor. With the exponential growth of the printmaking industry, every competitive advantage must be pursued to ensure the prosperity of your small business. Therefore, the key to success as a fine art printmaker is to produce the most visually appealing, archival, and sellable prints possible. About Breathing Color, Inc.

Breathing Color, Inc. is a leading designer and supplier of digital inkjet media and post-print protective coatings. Breathing Color is focused on the art and photographic markets with products that maximize color and longevity. Breathing Color’s customers benefit from the highest quality at competitive prices by buying direct. Breathing Color also supplies custom canon icc profiles for the Epson 9800 printer, Epson 7800 printer


Apr 17 2010

Canon mp560 prints out too red.?

Just got and set up a canon mp560 printer. It printed photos way too dark, flat and too blue. I found the icc profile and am using that to print out of adobe lightroom. Photos are not flat now, but too red!

Does any graphics person know what I need to do to get these photos printing out correctly?


Apr 12 2010

Helpful Information Regarding the Canon Ipf9000 Printer

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 is Canon’s launch into the 60″ wide format printer market segment. The Canon ipf9000 serves to fill a needed void in the marketplace for a high quality, production-friendly wide format inkjet printer that is larger than 44″ and still affordable. The release of the Canon ipf9000 60″ printer and Canon ipf8000 44″ printer began a direct attack on the already well established Epson printer market.

One of the major criticisms on Epson to date has been their reluctance, whether through choice or contractual boundary, to release an inkjet printer wider than 44″. The market has been demanding such a printer for some time since the only models available were from lower quality brands such as Roland, which were slow and used old ink sets. Canon’s decision to release the Canon ipf9000 immediately expressed their determination to fulfill this void in the race to establish a base of users. The release of the Canon ipf9000 should have happened years ago. Unfortunately for Canon, word on the street is that Epson is due to release a 64″ wide format inkjet printer some time in July 2007 that is expected to seduce the market into forgetting that the Canon ipf9000 ever existed in the first place. We will have to wait and see.

Until then, we should analyze the Canon ipf9000 and its unique features because some very notable advancements have been made. In this article we will analyze the different features and advantages of the Canon ipf9000.

Canon iPF9000 Photo

Further Information – Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000

Exceptional 60″ production has arrived. Enjoy borderless reproduction and jaw-dropping print quality with Canon’s flagship iPF9000. Featuring a new 12-colour pigment ink system, it guarantees the productivity to beat the toughest schedules.

12-Color Pigment Ink System – New LUCIA inks expand the range of color reproduction by providing a wide color gamut.

Automatic Switching Between Black Inks – utilizes automatic switching between Regular Black and Matte Black Ink, helping to eliminate wasted ink and time of swapping out ink tanks.

New Print Head System – dual print head system with a total of 30,720 nozzles.

Efficiency & Speed – The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 built-in 40 GB HDD

processes jobs fast, and maintains productivity and enables easy unmanned printing.

Borderless Printing – 4-sided edge to edge printing, only with roll media.

Non-firing Detection and Compensation Function – when clogged or non-firing nozzles are detected; print head cleaning cycle is automatically executed. If the nozzle remains obstructed, the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 will automatically compensate by rerouting the ink to functioning nozzles.

Superior image quality using the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000

The iPF9000 incorporates Canon’s new 12 ink full colour pigment ink system. A new one-inch dual print head gives jaw-dropping reproduction of 2400 x 1200 dpi, a 4 Pl droplet size and a total of 30,720 nozzles. Additional RGB colours ensure a wider colour gamut; grey and photo grey ensure better gradation, reduced granularity and high colour accuracy and consistency; whilst pigment ink ensures output is light fast.

Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 delivers outstanding production for print-for-pay and print bureaus

Eye-catching print quality makes the iPF9000 perfect for professional performance:60″ printing with precise colour calibration produces posters and signs that turn heads.Fine art productions never looked better with exceptional colour stability.Photographic works come to life thanks to an ultra-glossy feel and no graininess.Superb pigment ink colour reproduction makes for perfect longer lasting and stable proofs with less graininess than conventional pigment ink devices.

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 gives Flexible media handling

You can work with a wide variety of media types. Plain paper, CAD, recycled, glossy, proofing, synthetic, poster, fine art, sign media – they’re all handled effortlessly with the iPF9000.

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 is always productive

Connection is either via the latest-generation, high-speed USB 2.0 interface, or Ethernet. Combined with the dual-head pigment ink system, you can expect superb production at twice the level of some competitor devices.

The integrated cutting device won’t let you down either and keeps on performing for years to come, without ever needing replacement.

The Canon imagePROGRAF iPF9000 is easy-to-use, yet powerful

A large LCD panel aids operation and a rich set of software application plug-ins are incorporated. The Canon developed Poster template tool – PosterArtist, enables you to produce head-turning posters – with no experience whatsoever! It will even make professionals more productive.

To aid productivity further, we have 2 sizes of ink tanks (330ml or 700ml) and you can even replace the ink tanks whilst printing so that print deadlines aren’t affected.

If you are not interested in a 60″ wide printer, you should definitely look into the Canon imagePROGRAF iPF8000 which is a 44-inch wide format inkjet printer and is much less expensive.

Nick Friend, President of Breathing Color, Inc., is a principle-centered entrepreneur who has many years of experience in developing and executing innovative sales and marketing strategies as well as building, training, and leading national and international sales forces. His ability to recognize market opportunities, build successful business models, and lead organizations has been demonstrated with multiple business ventures including Schematics Productions, Inc., a niche focused men?s apparel company that was acquired by a large manufacturing company and is still in operation today. His diverse experience also extends to bringing related digital imaging products to market, including digital art papers for the professional art and photography markets. Here, Mr. Friend regularly contributes articles and expertise to key industry publications. Mr. Friend is also an accomplished musician whose past fifteen years have been spent writing music and performing live in locations all over the United States. He is an honored graduate of the University of Southern California, having studied at the well-renowned Marshall School of Business with emphasis in corporate and investment finance.


Apr 2 2010

which quality for raw images from Canon REBEL XT?

I shoot raw with my Rebel XT. When I do adjustments, it asks me about
image type: EXIF-JPEG
EXIF-JPEG
TIFF

Compression Ratio: 1 high compression
4 high image quality

Resolution: The default is 180 pixel/inch but it can be set beteen 10-2000

And thing is EMBED ICC profile in image??

Please help me. Which setting should I choose. What are the pros and cons of one another. What about resolution. What is the perfect setting.

I appreciate your replies. Thanks


Mar 23 2010

Where do I put the ICC profile on my computer?

I have a PC. It has Windows XP. I downloaded the paper profile for my Canon printer from Ilford’s website since that is the paper I’m using. Now where do I put it?