WHEN it comes to printing
photographs, inkjet printers are often thought of as poor cousins to the silver
halide process involved in film photography.
No longer prepared to accept
this notion, Epson has declared that the output of its inkjet printers is now
not just the equivalent of film, but superior to it.
The problem for Epson is that, generally, this is not believed.
However, the Picture Perfect Exhibition, currently in Sydney at the Billich
Gallery in The Rocks, displays a vast range of colour prints, some at
astonishing sizes, by well-known and amateur photographers, all printed on Epson
machines.
This, and a nationally touring collection of the works of renowned
photographer Robin Sellick, also entirely printed on Epson inkjetS robinsellick.coM may help to
dispel some myths about the relative merits of inkjet printing.