I hope you'll report back on this. I suspect it may be difficult to
maintain the "glow" after conversion to a print and subsequent loss of
dynamic range. But that's just a guess. And, if it is workable, it may
be critically dependent on the paper. One attempt may not answer the
question. Maybe (just from the marketing name since I know nothing
else) Kodak "luster" might even be the right stuff. :-)
Chuck Norcutt
On 9/10/2016 10:50 PM, Moose wrote:
I did find a glow option in Perfect Effects that I quite like, but it's
a whole different take on the image.
<http://zone-10.com/tope2/main.php?g2_itemId=20777>
Not quite B&W, perhaps pure monochrome, it certainly does glow on the
screen. I think I may find out what it looks like in a print.
I don't much like Adorama's Kodak luster, so it's matte or glossy.
Glowing Moose
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