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El. knyga: Digital Negatives with QuadToneRIP: Demystifying QTR for Photographers and Printmakers

(Professor of Photography at Montana State University, Bozeman),
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Digital Negatives with QuadToneRIP is a text that fully explores how the QuadToneRIP printer driver can be used to make expert digital negatives. The book takes a comprehensive, Ņunder-the-hoodÓ look at how Roy Harringtons QTR printer driver can be adapted for use by artists in several different creative practice areas. The text is written from the Mac/Photoshop point of view.

The book is divided into three parts. Part One is a step-by-step how-to section that will appeal to both beginning and more advanced practitioners. Part One includes quickstart guides­ or summary sheets for beginning students who want to jump into using QTR before understanding all of its functional components. Part Two addresses dimroom, darkroom, and printmaking practices, walking the reader through brief workflows from negative to print for lithium palladium, gum bichromate, cyanotype, salted paper, kallitype, silver gelatin and polymer photogravure, with a sample profile for each. It also includes an introduction to a new software iteration of QTR: QuickCurve-DN (QCDN). Part Three is devoted to contemporary practitioners who explain how they use QTR in their creative practice.

The book includes:











A list of supplies and software needed





A summary QTR glossary with a simple explanation of how each function works





A sample walk-through to create a QTR profile from start to finish





How to linearize profiles with simple to more exacting tools





A visual guide to modifying functions





Quickstart guides for many of the workflows





Instructions for crafting monochrome, duotone, tricolor, and quadcolor negatives





Instructions for using QTR to print silver gelatin in the darkroom





Instructions for using QTR to print alternative processes in the dimroom





Instructions for using QTR to print polymer photogravure in the printmaking room





Introductory chapter to QuickCurve-DN software





Troubleshooting common QTR problems





Generic starter profiles for processes discussed





Contemporary artists: their work and QTR process.

Learning how to craft expert digital negatives can be a bit overwhelming at the outset. Digital Negatives with QuadToneRIP makes the process as user-friendly as possible. Like other books in the series, Digital Negatives with QuadToneRIP is thoroughly comprehensive, accessible to different levels of learner, and illustrative of the contemporary arts.
Preface, Biography, Foreword, Part I: QuadToneRIP
1. Getting Started,
2.
Supplies,
3. Overview of QTR Vocabulary,
4. A Sample QTR Workflow,
5.
Linearizing a Profile,
6. A Visual Guide to Profile Functions,
7. Quickstart
Guides, 8.Troubleshooting QTR, Part II: Sample Workflows from Negative to
Print,
9. Silver Gelatin by Doug Ethridge,
10. Lithium Palladium,
11. Gum
Bichromate, 12.Cyanotype,
12. Salted Paper,
14. Kallitype by Don Nelson,
15.
Polymer Photogravure by Clay Harmon,
16. QuickCurve-DN by Richard Boutwell,
Part III: Contemporary Artists,
17. Contemporary Artists, Harlan H. Chapman,
Martha E. Davis, David J. Eisenlord, Douglas Ethridge, Kate Jordahl, Sandy
King, Michael Puff, Judith Roan, Michael P. Rosenberg, Keith Schreiber, Bill
Schwab, Mark Severson, John Foxe Sheets, Ryan Stander, Sam Wang, Jeanne
Wells, Tom Wise, Rebecca Zeiss, Appendix, Bibliography, Index
Dr. Ron Reeder (19392019) was a research molecular biologist, retiring in 2002 from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle at which time he devoted himself to a second career in photography. Reeders particular interest was landscape photography. In addition, he relished taking wildlife, portraiture, and still life. Reeder was the first to apply Roy Harringtons QuadToneRIP software to the making of digital negatives and went on to author books on the subject. This book is Reeders third on the technology of making digital negatives using QTR and is a testament to his role as mentor of the photographers included in its pages.

Christina Z. Andersons work focuses on the contemporary vanitas printed in a variety of 19th century photographic processes, primarily gum and casein bichromate, salted paper, cyanotype, and palladium. Andersons work has shown internationally in over 100 shows and 50 publications. This is her sixth book on alternative processes. Anderson is Series Editor for the Contemporary Practices in Alternative Process Photography series and Professor of Photography at Montana State University. To see more of her work, visit christinaZanderson.com.