Old 11-17-2006, 14:22   #1
Team Sergeant
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Digital Photo Printer

We've talked about digital cameras, what does everyone think about digital photo printers? What's the best one for say under $1000 and capable of 8x10 photos?

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Old 11-17-2006, 15:37   #2
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What quality? Ink jet? Thermal ribbon?

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Old 11-17-2006, 15:52   #3
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For a grand, you can get a very nearly professional photo printer that is capable of 11x17 or 22x34 - it's not the printer itself that's going to break the bank, it's the photo quality cartridges and the paper. The high end inks and papers (coated, no bleed, high hold, heavy weight, acid free) are wallet eaters.
Single color cartridges (minimum of 4, 5 better - cyan, magenta, yellow, green, black) can run up to $100 a piece and only have fair life spans depending on what you print (depends on saturations, and colors - cmygb/cmyk printing gives true resolution, but eats ink due to overlay screening). Be prepared for anywhere from $0.40 - $5.00/sheet for good quality paper depends on size, weight, bleed, hold, coat and content. Yeah, I know, too many years in publishing operations, production and finance - but you asked.

I was assuming near professional quality end product, something with 'true' photo finish results. Clue me further, and I'll come up wit ha few products.

Lexmark makes some good stuff, as do Nikon and Ricoh.
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Old 11-17-2006, 16:56   #4
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OK second question; would it make more sense to have the digital photos done by photo shops? Or should I continue to shop for my own printer?(We're talking maybe a few hundred photos a year.)

Thanks for the replies!

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Old 11-17-2006, 17:05   #5
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If maintaining color quality in the photos is a high priority, I'd recommend having the prints made at the photo store. Their processes *should* be far more colorfast than home printers as long as they maintain their chemicals properly. The price will probably be very competitive with printing at home, though you lose the convenience. (Home printing has its own set of inconveniences, too, I guess)

edited:
well, from the comments below, i see i've been out of the business too long. i can't believe how cheap dye sub is these days and the longevity claimed by inkjet.

Last edited by jfhiller; 11-17-2006 at 19:45.
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Old 11-17-2006, 17:55   #6
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Laser?

Product Description
The Dell Color Laser Printer 3100cn is the reliable color laser printer, at the price of black and white. You won't be sacrificing performance or quality with up to 25 pages per minute in black and white and 5 pages per minute color (actual print speed will vary with use) at a max resolution of 600 x 600 dpi with 2400 image quality. Low cost of printing per page (including drum) at 1.5 cents per page in black and white and 9.9 cents per page in color. Dell Color Track can lower your total cost of printing by offering a separate monochrome print driver that allows you to designate color and/or black and white printing on an individual or workgroup basis. Standard Ethernet 10/100 BaseT networking, USB and parallel port. Standard 250 sheet drawer and 150-sheet multipurpose tray. Maximum input capacity 900 sheets, optional 250 sheet legal paper drawer, 250 sheet A4 paper drawer, 500 sheet A4 drawer and duplexer. 600 x 600 dpi with 2400 image quality Fast, black and white up to 25ppm print speed (actual print speed will vary with use) Color up to 5 ppm print speed (actual print speed will vary with use) Maximum input capacity 900 sheets Monthly duty cycle up to 45K pages Ships with 4K each Black and Color (Magenta, Cyan and Yellow) toner cartridges Optional 250 sheet legal paper drawer, 250 sheet A4 paper drawer, 500 sheet A4 drawer and duplexer Standard Ethernet 10/100 BaseT networking, USB and parallel port Standard 1-Year At Home Service3 and 24x7 toll free phone technical support .
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Old 11-17-2006, 17:58   #7
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Dye Sub?

The Kodak Professional 1400 Digital Photo Printer is an affordable 8 x 10-inch, color printer that's perfect for advanced amateurs, professional users and small labs. Priced at $499, the Kodak 1400 is the least expensive of Kodak's professional grade printers and within the budget of us "normal" folks. The Kodak 1400 produces consistent results using dry imaging technology so there's no worries of clogged heads or spilled ink.

Whether in a studio or on location for proofing or at home for final printing and displaying, the robust desktop printer produces one 8x12, one 8x10, two 6x8, two5x7 or four 4x6-inch photos per sheet, and the water-resistant photos last a lifetime. The Kodak Professional paper and ribbon consumables are bundled in matched volumes to provide optimum color density for every print, eliminating worries associated with low ink levels. Consumables—including paper available in 50- and 25-sheet packs—are priced competitively to similar offerings on the market.

Kodak Professional 1400 features include:


90 seconds per print

Gloss and matte finish output available for professional portrait applications

50-sheet paper capacity in / out

Accepts A4, 8.5 x 14" and 8.5 x 12" paper sizes (full size A4 30 x 20 cm)

Maximum Image size - 8.27 x 12 inches

USB 2.0 interface

Windows and Macintosh printer drivers
The Kodak Professional 1400 Digital Photo Printer carries a suggested U.S. list price of $499 and is available now from authorized dealers of Kodak Professional Thermal Printer products.
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In the business of war, there is no invariable stategic advantage (shih) which can be relied upon at all times.
Sun-Tzu, "The Art of Warfare"

Hearing, I forget. Seeing, I remember. Writing (doing), I understand. Chinese Proverb

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Old 12-04-2006, 19:10   #8
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Team Sergeant
OK second question; would it make more sense to have the digital photos done by photo shops? Or should I continue to shop for my own printer?(We're talking maybe a few hundred photos a year.)

Thanks for the replies!

TS
I have an HP psc 1210 which is 4,800x1,200 dpi, that I got a couple years ago for $100. I don't belieive that is the curent model, but that series is the best bang for the buck IMO. At around $100 you get a printer/copier/scanner, that is a photo printer. The ink is fairly inexspensive. It turns out some decent photos. It scans at 600 x 2,400 dpi which isn't the greatest, but I usually only use the scanner for documents. It will print out some decent photos. Within reason, you can't buy a personal printer that will print photos as good as Walgreens, or Walmart, etc. Think about what kind of equipment they have.

Take your memory card into a Circuit City, etc, and get them to print something off for you. Maybe even something you had printed at a Walgreens. Compare them. For the cost and convenience, you can't go wrong. If you want stellar quality, then you already know you can go elsewhere. As for supplies, my wife wears the hell out of ours printing photos, and my kids print off all kinds of garbage from their kid sites. I don't think the usage is that bad.
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