Documenting the Latino Experience in America with Inkjet Photo Printing

Photographic Art Exhibition Printing
Gihan Tubbeh’s work for the LATINO/US Cotidiano exhibition in Washington, D.C., printed by Bridget Sue Lambert on a Canon iPF8300 from LexJet on LexJet Sunset Photo eSatin Paper.

 

Bridget Sue Lambert launched her diverse and eclectic visual arts business about a year ago. With the discerning eye of an artist and a photographer, and years of fine art and photographic printmaking behind her, Lambert was well equipped to handle the important and relatively massive project that came through her doors earlier this year.

Art Exhibition Printing
Photographic art by Ricardo Cases printed by Bridget Sue Lambert for the LATINO/US Cotidiano exhibition in Washington D.C.

The project, entitled LATINO/US Cotidiano (cotidiano means “everyday life”) and created and produced by SPAIN arts & culture, is the culmination of a wide-ranging group of photographers – a dozen total – who captured the Latino experience in America. Their work would then be translated into large format for the benefit of visitors to an exhibition in Washington, D.C.

Lambert would end up printing 95 images, ranging from approximately 20″ x 30″ to 40″ x 60″ (Lambert worked in millimeters since she was coordinating images with a dozen photographers located at various points on the globe).

Inkjet Printing and Proofing
Laying out the artwork and comparing proofs to final prints at Lambert’s studio. The large image in the foreground is by Ricardo Cases.

The exhibit is on display at the former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain at 2801 16th Street NW in Washington, D.C., and will be featured there until May 12. The exhibition will then pick up stakes and tour various cities across the U.S.

Claudi Carreras, one of the foremost experts on IberoAmerican Latino photography, was commissioned to research and select established and emerging photographers of Latino descent who both embrace the theme of the exhibit and excel at their craft.

The exhibition included noted artists Carlos Alvarez Montero, Sol Aramendi, Katrina Marcelle d’Autremont, Cale, Ricardo Cases, Livia Corona, Hector Mata, Karen Miranda, Dulce Pinzon, Susana Raab, Stefan Ruiz and Gihan Tubbeh.

“They let me pick the paper the images were printed on, and I chose LexJet Sunset Photo eSatin Paper because it prints nicely, has a good price point and is durable,” explains Lambert. “The challenge was working with 12 different photographers who are justifiably particular about their work, and I wanted to do the best I possibly could for each image.”

Printing and Framing Photos
Printed and framed for exhibition are two of Karen Miranda’s photographic art pieces for the exhibition. Lambert worked with Light LLC, who framed the pieces.

Lambert used the Canon iPF8300 inkjet printer she bought from LexJet and printed the images through Photoshop. She printed proofs before submitting the images for printing at their final sizes.

“Jayme McClellan, who runs Civilian Art Projects, was a liaison on this project. She came in and we checked the proofs, made any changes and printed it to the size specified. I keep records of proofs and once approved I use Photoshop to bring the layers over with the proper adjustments I made to get it right. I want to keep what the artist intended; not what I intended. Photographers spend a lot of time adjusting their images before they print and I made sure to preserve those adjustments,” says Lambert. “I did all the printing over a month’s timeframe, which is challenging, and only lost five final prints that I had to re-print. When I went to the opening of the exhibition, I had not met most of the artists. Three of them came up to me and told me they loved how their images looked, so that was a relief.”

Lambert had the images framed at Light LLC, Silver Spring, Md. She works with Jeff Knabb, who does most of Lambert’s photo mounting and framing. Lambert and Knabb delivered the prints, which were framed in thin, black metal frames behind plexiglass, to the exhibition in batches of 30 or so.

Photographic Exhibition of Inkjet Printed Photography
The opening of the exhibition at the former Residence of the Ambassadors of Spain at 2801 16th Street NW in Washington, D.C., which will be featured there until May 12 and then will travel to cities across the U.S.

“The artists were excited about the prints: the eSatin has a nice weight and is durable so you don’t have to worry as much about moving the prints around. It’s a lot more forgiving than other photo papers; it cuts and prints great. I’ve never had any quality issues with this paper,” she says.

Lambert adds that the support she received from Canon and her LexJet customer specialist, Rob Finkel, was instrumental in ensuring a smooth and ultimately successful process from start to finish.

“The support from Canon has been amazing. I had a printhead go down in the middle of the project, but fortunately it was under warranty and Canon got it over to me the next day. If I had to buy another printer, I would definitely buy another Canon,” Lambert says. “Rob is always helpful. I couldn’t do half of what I did without his help. I appreciate the support he provides that’s above and beyond what anyone else provides.”

For more information about the exhibit and the artists:

Feature at BBC News Magazine

LATINO/US Cotidiano at Flickr

LATINO/US Cotidiano backgrounder at SPAIN arts & culture

Window Shopping with Inkjet Printed Graphics at Unlimited Exposures

Wall Murals and Window Graphics
Brett Feldman of Unlimited Exposures uses large format inkjet printing to help drive photography sales from the street and in his studio with window and wall graphics.

 

Brett Feldman, owner of Unlimited Exposures, Manalapan, N.J., knows the value of taking his business to the streets and driving traffic to his studio with large-format versions of his stellar photography.

Window Graphics
Brett Feldman’s latest window displays, printed on LexJet Water-Resistant Satin Cloth, look great from the outside and the inside of his studio, Unlimited Exposures.

Brett utilizes a variety of inkjet media from LexJet to make this happen and has had great success with this approach. As noted in an earlier post here at the LexJet Blog, he finds unique applications for his Canon iPF8300 inkjet printer, not only for self-promotion, but as value-added printing for the events he photographs.

At his streetside studio in Manalapan, Brett decorates both his windows and the interior of the studio with samples of his work. For about six months he featured his wedding and communion photography on the outside of his window with LexJet Aqueous Perforated Window Vinyl (70/30).

Perforated Window Vinyl Graphics
This window display, printed on LexJet Aqueous Perforated Window Vinyl, was up for about six months before Brett Feldman switched it up in favor of banners that hang inside the studio windows.

“Some kids were picking at it and dismantling it, but it was up for quite awhile before they vandalized it. My studio has an overhang, so there was no rain but a lot of sun on the images, and they weathered well. It definitely brought people to our doors and the material printed well and applied with ease,” Brett says.

Since then, he decided to bring the images indoors and inside the four fronting windows of his studio. Now, all four windows feature images printed on LexJet Water-Resistant Satin Cloth.

For these displays, Brett uses LexJet Heavy Duty Banner Tape to create pole pockets on the top and bottom of each banner, which are then hung from curtain rods that go through the pockets and are tied off with fishing line that attaches to the ceiling.

Brett also uses Photo Tex from LexJet for a wall mural inside the studio. His large-format inkjet printing serves a dual purpose: to bring people inside and make sales, and to test inkjet media for various applications.

“Most of it gets tried out at the studio and then we take it out to sell it to our clients. I end up printing a lot of banners and other specialty graphics for people who see them in our studio and at the events,” he adds.

Building Business with In-House Inkjet Printing and Samples at Arc Studios

Printing Promotional Graphics with an Inkjet PrinterAaron Thomason, owner of Arc Studios Photography in Dalton, Ga., knows the value of a print. It’s what helps showcase and sell his artistic portrait photography.

With a variety of inkjet-printable media from which to choose through LexJet, Thomason is able to present his work in a variety of formats, each with its own unique look.

“I don’t have to do any advertising other than the promotional printing I do for my studio and storefront. I can place a banner stand next to the street so people driving by can see it, so I get a lot of people stopping in who saw it when they drove or walked by the studio,” says Thomason. “I typically use a big image with just a few simple words so that my studio is in the back of their mind when they need something I can provide.”

For banner stands, Thomason uses a LexJet Blizzard Outdoor Stand with LexJet TOUGHcoat Water-Resistant Polypropylene, and on his storefront windows he uses Photo Tex Repositionable Fabric. “I change those images up regularly and they work great. They see some rain and other weather, but the images have held up fine,” says Thomason.

Printing Promotional Graphics Inkjet PrinterOn the inside of the studio, Thomason showcases canvas gallery wraps printed on either LexJet Sunset Reserve Bright Matte Canvas or LexJet Sunset Production Matte Canvas, and Photo Tex for wall murals.

He also uses LexJet Sunset Photo Metallic Paper for images that lend themselves to the pearlescent pop of the paper.

“Before I started doing my own printing I was lucky if I sold one canvas print per session. Now I’m able to sell three or four canvases per portrait client since I was able to bring the price down by doing it in-house,” explains Thomason. “We stretch the canvas here on a 1 1/2″ frame and add the UV coating, so I’m able to produce canvas less expensively for my customers, deliver it on time and ultimately sell more canvas.”

Prints that Win: Dennis the Menace

Award Winning Print

Cheri MacCallum, owner of Art by Cheri, Idaho Falls, Idaho, is one of those talented few who have had the honor of winning a LexJet Sunset Award two years in a row.

Unfortunately, we can’t show you MacCallum’s latest winning image; she’s entering it in a national competition and it’s not a good idea to let it leak out to the public. There are affiliated jurors who might see it, who would then have to disqualify themselves from judging.

We had the same issue last year following the PPA Western District competition. The good news is that we can now reveal last year’s winning Sunset Award winner from the PPA Western District: Dennis the Menace.

MacCallum says Dennis the Menace, a portrait photographed in New Orleans, was likely an award winner in the Portrait category for three factors: expression, lighting and painting. MacCallum is a masterful artist in Corel Painter who also paints for other photographers.

“I work on it in Photoshop and re-touch it, take it into Corel Painter and bring it back into Photoshop to prepare it for printing,” says MacCallum. “When I enter print competitions I don’t think about awards, I think about improving myself and pushing the envelope. If the judges think it’s worthy, all the better. Any good photography makes a good competition print as well: posing, lighting, color, composition, subject material… the whole nine yards has to come together.”

MacCallum adds that for competition, the print itself could spell the difference between winning and losing. For this image, MacCallum printed the image on LexJet 8 Mil ImagePro Gloss with her Canon iPF8300 and applied it to art board.

“I called LexJet and told my rep what I was doing and that I didn’t need anything really thick and heavy, or what I normally provide my clients: fine art paper and canvas. Based on that, we came to the conclusion that ImagePro Gloss would be a good fit. Print presentation is definitely one of the elements they look for, and this print material worked well,” adds MacCallum.

The Seventh Wave of Surfing, Photography and Inkjet Printing

Home decor ocean artwork
This stunning piece, Perfect Blue by Larry Beard of Solitary Exposure, was printed on LexJet Sunset Photo Metallic Paper and topped with acrylic.

In surfing lore the seventh wave is the crackin’ one; that epic wave in a series that begs to be caught. Whether or not the seventh wave lore is really true, there is at least a figurative seventh wave, one that Larry Beard has caught numerous times, both on a board and with his camera.

Pro surfing and inkjet printing
Larry Beard surfing professionally back in the day.

Beard is a former pro surfer who transitioned into photography – mainly fashion and commercial photography – after his time on the pro circuit. Beard’s connection to the ocean, however, was too strong to deny and surf photography soon became his focus.

That transition back to his first love, the ocean, also brought up the question of how best to present the photographic ocean art he was capturing. The picture shown here of one of Beard’s creations that adorns a client’s dining room is representative of that evolution toward the ideal presentation of his work.

Art blocks on acrylic
More examples of Sunset Photo Metallic behind acrylic, aka Solitary Exposure ARTBLOCKS.

Beard explains its creation: “First, we print the image on Sunset Photo Metallic Paper we get from LexJet. I’m really happy with that paper, by the way; it’s awesome. We then laminate it to either 1/4″ or 1/2″ acrylic, attached to a wood backing that has a Z-bar hanging mechanism. The Z-bar is an interlocking channel system where on channel is attached to the piece, top and bottom, with a corresponding Z-bar on the wall that you literally just drop it into the interlocking channels. A 1/4″ acrylic piece will weigh about 50 pounds; on half inch it’s about 80 pounds. It’s a substantial piece that you don’t want coming down in an earthquake or if someone bumps into it, and the Z-bar makes it solid.”

Canvas giclee art
Hells Angel and Sons of Anarchy star Rusty Coones with a 65" x 40" giclee Sunset Canvas of Solitary Exposure's "Liquid Avalanche".

Beard has created these stunning acrylic pieces for homes, offices and restaurants. This particular piece, called Perfect Blue, was selected by Beard to complement his client’s newly remodeled home and dining room.

“With the acrylic and the Sunset Metallic paper you get the utmost in detail. It’s so sharp; it looks like a flat screen HD TV. The acrylic gives it a glow that softens it and at the same time gives it more detail; I know that’s an oxymoron, but that’s the best way to describe it. It’s by far my favorite medium. It’s so high-end looking,” says Beard. “That particular image is so majestic and when you print it on Sunset Metallic it really elevates that room.”

Canvas art giclee triptych
Beard also creates Sunset Canvas triptychs of his work that are quite popular with home owners.

Beard began doing his own printing a few months ago when he purchased a Canon iPF8300 from LexJet. His expertise in color management and Photoshop, coupled with the wider color gamut of the 12-color printer, has been a revelation.

“I’m blown away with what we’re able to produce with that printer,” says Beard. “We were sending our work out before we got the printer and our prints look 20 to 30 percent better.”

Perfect Blue was captured during a photo shoot in the South Pacific with pro surfers Sunny Garcia and Koby Abberton for Carve Sunglasses. The shoot was another opportunity for Beard to capture the perfect, or seventh if you prefer, wave and add it to his online store at solitaryexposure.com. The online gallery also carries and prints the work of photo artists like Russ Sanders and David Puu.

“There are all kinds of techniques, styles, creativity and locations from talented artists. Once you get over yourself, you open up to being able to help those artists and pass along a wider variety of images,” says Beard.

Fine art canvas triptych
Beard also works with other artists and photographers, who are part of his online gallery at solitaryexposure.com. This is Russ Sanders with a Sunset Canvas triptych called "Gone Fishing".

The quality of Beard’s work comes from quantity. It takes a lot of time in the ocean, and the hazards associated with that, to capture his signature style. It starts before dawn when Beard dons a wetsuit and flippers, toting a his Canon 5D Mark III in a water housing to find what he calls those “magic moments.”

“With digital photography and GoPro, as well as file sharing on social networks, people are inundated with so much really good stuff. My thing is to get out there at five in the morning when the best light is best and put myself in those situations where you can capture that moment. That magic moment requires a little bit of luck, so the more you’re out there the more chances you have to capture it and come away with something special and unique and over and above what’s out there,” explains Beard. “In order to get some of those barrel shots you have to put yourself in the most critical part of the wave: I try to get it where the lip of the wave barely misses my head. I went to Bali after the Carve Sunglasses shoot since I was over there anyway and got smashed on the reef on my first session out and my water housing hit the reef, put a hole in it and flooded my brand new Canon. It’s got its perils, but I love the images I get.”

Fine art photography on canvas
Sunset Burst by David Puu, perfectly rendered on Sunset Canvas by Solitary Exposure, San Clemente, Calif.

Based in San Clemente, Calif., a nice, relatively sleepy beach town on the Southern California coastline, Beard says his favorite spot to shoot in SoCal is south Laguna.

“There are a lot of unique coves that are amazing. You can go down there this time of year and there’s no one down there. It’s such a perfect spot with the cliffs, the coves, a surf that breaks really shallow for dramatic photos, and the water is very clear,” he says.

Turning a Bar Mitzvah into a Basketball Court with Inkjet Printing

Printing floor graphics on a dance floor

With the large-format inkjet printing tools and media now at your disposal you can decorate just about anything, and turn the humdrum into something special.  That’s exactly what Brett Feldman, owner of Unlimited Exposures, Manalapan, N.J., did at a recent bar mitzvah.

Printing graphics for a bar mitzvahThe party planner, Marquis Florals & Event Design by Kim in Matawan, N.J., was interested in doing something completely off the wall, both literally and figuratively, and asked Brett if he could create a basketball court on the dance floor at the venue. Having worked with Photo Tex PSA repositionable fabric from LexJet before, Brett thought this material would be the perfect one-night dance floor material.

“The Photo Tex surface is not officially slip resistant, Michael Clementi [Brett’s personal customer specialist] made sure I knew that. However, when I discussed it with the party planner we both agreed that it was actually less slippery than the marble floor,” Brett says. “There were more than 100 kids and 50 adults at the event and the dance floor was packed all night. The floor held up great; the graphic didn’t peel off the floor and stick to anyone’s feet, and no one slipped on it. In fact, someone dropped a glass with liquid in it on the floor and it wiped right off.”

Inkjet printing floor graphicsThe total size of the basketball court graphic was 50′ x 20′. Brett printed it in 15 panels on his Canon iPF8300 44″ inkjet printer. Each panel was printed at about 38″ x 20′ and applied to the marble dance floor area, which is surrounded by carpet.

“I’ve used Photo Tex for our walls, as well as LexJet Aqueous Perforated Vinyl for our storefront windows, so this application was a breeze,” Brett says. “Now I’m getting requests for more of the same, and I say, ‘No problem…'”