Originally Posted by
DanK
Manfred,
Apart from larger maximum print size, it was your last point that led me to replace my Pro-100. I did my first (tiny) exhibit in a reputable photo venue, and I was able to list the images as being printed with archival inks on museum-grade media. Neither of those statements would have been true of my modal print beforehand, which were dye inks on luster papers.
I frame everything using acid free backing board and mat board and archival linen tape. When I am not trying to save money, I use UV-filtering glass. With that treatment, prints from the Pro-100 are likely to last as long as I do, and perhaps longer.
Re how noticeable the difference is: after I set up my prograf 1000, I reprinted this image on the same Red River Canvas that I had used with the Pro-100:
it's not a good choice for that image, and it isn't a good choice for a comparison, but the two looked extremely similar. It's my only clean comparison. I have reprinted some additional photos, but they were mostly printed on a luster paper with the Pro 100 and on Canson baryta with the Prograf.
As it happens, I recently gave a two-hour tutoring session on printing, using my Prograf, but I recommended to the person I was teaching that he buy the Pro-100 and explained why. He just wrote to say that he had.
BTW, if what Canon asserts about the the "Chroma optimizer" it layers on top of the pigment inks in the Grograf, it should further reduce the difference. The maintain that by covering the irregularities across pigment droplets, it increases gamut width and the density of blacks. .