Giclée and Digital Printing
Artists Printing for Artists

We offer custom giclée and digital photo printing
click this link for a pdf of our current price list

  Examples of some of our print projects    

1. What is giclée printing?
Giclée is the name for a specialized high resolution inkjet process using pigmented inks on archival papers or canvas. Most inkjet printers use dye based inks that start out looking bright but fade quickly, sometimes in a matter of months. Depending on the paper or canvas used, giclée prints have fade resistance of 50 to 100+ years.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Epson 9600® Print Station

This is our work-horse printer printing on 44" wide enhanced matte paper, Hannemuhle, Somerset and other watercolor papers, canvas and other fabrics.

2. How do I have giclée prints made of my work?
For best quality bring or send your original to our studio to be scanned. We will scan your original and do color corrections to the digital file for the media you choose for the final prints. Or you may send us a digital file of the work along with a proof print (a color photo or other print with the colors as you want them). For best reproduction the resolution should be 300 ppi at the physical size of the desired print. An alternate would be a digital photo of your work at your camera's highest quality setting that includes a photographer's gray scale or gray card in the image (Gray Scales and Gray Cards are available photo supply stores.) We will then print a color proof for your approval. You may view the proof in our studio or we will send it to you for approval or mark up. Upon approval you decide how many prints you want produced at that time. You do not need to have all the prints in an edition done at one time. We keep the approved digital image and one reference print on file for future printing.

 BetterLight® Scanning Camera

Our 144 MP scanning camera with chroma 50 soft surround lighting produces high resolution images with very accurate color rendition.

3. Why are color corrections nessecary?
Color is our brain's interpretation of light waves reflected or absorbed by some surface. Under pure white light (sunlight unaffected by stuff in the air: dust, water vapor, etc.) a particular pigment on a particular surface will always be the same color to a particular individual. We do not always view things under pure white light. Incandescent lights have lots of red and yellow light waves but few blue waves; fluorescent lights have peaks of green and yellow but can vary considerably.
Pigments also can change color with the surface on which they are applied. Light may be reflecting from the surface through the pigment changing its apparent color. Pigments may also have a chemical reaction to the surface and change color.
Add to this the variations in color sensitivity of the devices we use to capture an image. Film is notorious for its variations in color balance. But digital scanners and cameras also vary. Cheap cameras and scanners have difficulty capturing subtle differences in blues and violets.
We do our image capture under color balanced lighting and calibrate our cameras/scanners and monitors to standardized color test patterns. However the final color calibration has to be a real person doing a side by side comparison under good lighting. That is a long answer to a short question but the complete answer is book length.

  Elisabeth at work at our Epson 9600 work station.

 

 

 

4. How are giclée prints priced?
The original scan and color correction is a one-time cost. Small images, letter size or smaller, that can be scanned on a flat-bed scanner involve little set up time and are less expensive. Large images are shot with a digital scanning back in a large format camera. This requires more set up time adjusting the camera and lighting to produce the best possible image capture. We keep your approved image on file for future printing.
The final prints are priced per square inch of the image based on your desired media and include a one to two inch border proportional to the size of the print. There is not the press set up time that is involved in offset printing so there is no minimum quantity of prints. Each time you order prints the cost per print will be the same unless a change in the cost of our supplies.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   Canon CLC 1180® Laser Printer

The Canon 1180 copier/printer produces photo quality laser prints fast and economically.

 

click this link for a pdf of our current price list

CALL 1-320-275-3403 or E-MAIL robert@wildestudios.com FOR MORE INFORMATION

Examples of some of our print projects

We accept
by phone or

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Robert Wilde BFA, MA., Dassel, MN 55325   (320) 275-3403  robert@wildestudios.com
Robert Wilde Studios copyright 1996-2008 last rev. 6-3-08
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