U of S | Mailing List Archive | alt-photo-process-l | the look of tricolor vs CMYK

the look of tricolor vs CMYK



On Jan 30, 2007, at 8:49 AM, Katharine Thayer wrote:

As for whether CMYK all in gum is tricolor, no, it's got four color layers, :--) and besides, it also looks different from tricolor gum. It was very easy for me, going through the gum galleries in alternative photography, to pick out the tricolor gums from the gum over cyanotypes from the CMYK prints. I can't even quite articulate how they're different, but they're different.
Driving around looking at real estate today (you know how sometimes an answer to a problem will pop into your head when you're thinking about something entirely different) I realized that what makes a CMYK print look different from a tricolor gum print is the blacks. Watercolor painters are often cautioned not to use black paint, but to make their blacks and other darks by mixing or overlaying colors, because black paint gives a dead flat look, whereas the mixed blacks are livelier. It's the same thing with gum prints. It's an ineffable thing, but you can tell the difference. With a tricolor, the blacks have undertones of color and life, and with CMYK, the blacks are just sort of flat and dead. It's a subjective thing; maybe not everyone could see the difference. But to me it makes the two kinds of print easy to distinguish. Understand, I'm not ranking them; I'm just saying they're different. I can imagine places where that dead black would be exactly the look you might want.
Katharine