Exhibition of unique photographs at the Print Media Academy
High
Definition Skia Photography (HDSP) is the name of the new,
revolutionary printing process that delivers photo prints of
unprecedented quality on conventional offset paper and reproduces even
the finest textures and details. This new technology, which works
directly from the negative - the skiagraphic image - produces
photographs without the need for a darkroom.To
mark this breakthrough, the inventor of HSDP, Dieter Kirchner, and
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG (Heidelberg) organised an exhibition of
around 50 photographs at the Print Media Academy in Heidelberg at the
end of July. These will include contributions from notable
photographers such as Dieter Appelt, Manfred Hamm, Ulrich Mack, and Jim
Rakete - all of them produced using HDSP.All
the photos in the PMA exhibition were printed on Heidelberg presses.
The necessary quality is achieved by ensuring the right interplay
between press, software, and consumables - ink in particular.How does HDSP work?In
High Definition Skia Photography, negatives, slides or raw data are
recorded in two different digital data sets. An electronic darkroom
programme uses this data to calculate all gamma curves that are of
relevance to the developing process for printing purposes. Based on a
defined digital image, the photographer adjusts the paper gradation as
he previously did in the darkroom. Prints are produced using special
inks adapted to the developer substances. This also turns the press
into a darkroom, the key difference being that the printing process is
reproducible.This printing
technology is based on a new standardisation process for uniform,
optimised colour separation and the design of the new Heidelberg
presses. As a result, it is possible to print even short runs with
barely perceptible fluctuations in tone.Since
conventional photo paper only has a limited image gamut, around a third
of the optical image gamut is cut off. HDSP, on the other hand,
exhibits an image gamut that lies at the limit of visual perception.
For the first time, all visible components captured by the camera are
transferred to the print. Given that the three-dimensional perception
of paper prints depends on the image gamut and simultaneous contrast,
an HDSP print achieves a high natural three-dimensionality.www.print-media-academy.com