1. Image is extremely out of focus. 2. Image is brought closer to focus. 3. Image is almost focused. 4. Image is now focused. 5. The image has now been gone past perfect focus and will have to be brought back in focus by adjusting the focuser in the opposite direction. 6. The image is back in focus. At this stage the image needs to be zoomed in to to check this is really the best focus you can get. The star points should be small and have the small peaks of the triangle just appearing at the dots three corners
česká verze na konci, for Czech version scroll down
What is the concept of the book? The book is not just an accidental selection of generic photographs from a road-trip in the US. From the very beginning I wanted to combine two different lines in the story – America and my friend H. I also must confess inspiration from the fabulous books – "Americans“ by Robert Frank and "A Period of Juvenile Prosperity“ by Mike Brodie.
Why you might like the book...
I deliberately blended a conceptual idea with the bold visual of warm Kodak films along with short poems. You might find disturbing disclosures in the poems and might experience emotions which you may not have uncovered with the photographs alone. You might find this book is not about the trip around the US...
How to Professionally Clean Epson 3800 & 3880 Printers
Don't throw out your EPSON PRO 3800 - 3880 or R3000 printer!
Revive it doing this!
Printhead Removal and Flush
DIY Inkjet print head cleaner,simple,cheap,effective
How to print with Epson 3880 and Epson Hot Press, Fine Art paper
We talk from start to finish on how to print using a Epson 3880, Apple computer and Adobe Photoshop to get the best prints possible.In this tutorial we talk about printing with the Epson 3880 printer and talk about the Epson Signature Worthy Sample pack.
5) IF THE NOZZLE CHECK IS MISSING IN THE SAME PLACE EACH TIME In our experience, if your nozzle check is missing in the same place each time, the print head itself is at fault and the likely cause is ink that has dried outside the print head. If your nozzle check is variable, the likely cause is that air is entering the ink system, usually due to the cartridge failing to make an air-tight seal with the printer. Although often air can enter through internal splits in the ink lines, damper or connections. So if you have a variable nozzle check, we advise changing the suspect cartridge(s). If your nozzle check is missing in the same places each time, read on...
A kind reader recently wrote to suggest an ingenious solution to the
Epson 4880 printer head clogging. It is very simple: all you have to do
is pour about one cup of plain tap water into the maintenance tank every
four months or so. Evidently, the print head parks over the maintenance
tank and the key to stop clogging is to keep it from drying out. Waste
ink was supposed to do that, but in dry environments or with infrequent
printing it is insufficient, and clogging quickly becomes a major issue.
Adding water into the maintenance tank provides sufficient liquid to
continue evaporating over a longer period of time. According to the
reader, this was advised by an Epson engineer.
The life of the maintenance tank is not shortened by adding water
because the chip/computer does not know you did so; also, the water
evaporates over time, which is what keeps the print head moist and clog
free. Naturally, you need to use judgment when adding water, i.e. you
should not overflow it. The worst that can happen, though, is that you
create a bit of a mess.
I first poured tap water into the maintenance tank in early November
2014, thinking that I would observe how this would work over a longer
period of time. Frankly, I was somewhat skeptical at first and did not
see any noticeable changes right away; with hindsight, it apparently
took some time for the water to evaporate and start providing a more
humid micro environment. After a couple of weeks and a number of head
cleaning cycles, however, things decidedly turned for the better: I
mostly have not experienced head clogging since then, largely regardless
of how often I print and how much printing I do in one go.
This may not necessarily work for other printer models, nor may it
be a panacea for print head clogging, but the approach is definitely
worth exploring.