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FORUMS Community Talk, Chatter & Stuff General Photography Talk 
Thread started 14 Jul 2003 (Monday) 17:59
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Printing Digital Photos

 
shacks
Hatchling
7 posts
Joined Mar 2003
     
Jul 14, 2003 17:59 |  #1

Hi,

I have recently purchased a Canon Bubblejet i950 which produces great photos.

However, I am yet to find some software that can produce photoquality prints of any size up to A4. I currently use easyphoto however this only allows 6x4 or 8x6 or A4.

I have found that layout print (that also came with the printer) only produces poor, draft prints.

Please help on a (preferably free!) software that can arrange and print my photos at photo quality.

Many thanks

Paul




  
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ryuwulf
Senior Member
369 posts
Joined Jun 2003
     
Jul 15, 2003 13:08 |  #2

Hello,

I am also experimenting with print quality.
The one thing that i have found is to have a higher
resolution than your printer .

in other words, if your printer has a max of 300 lpi, save your pic at a resolution around 450 or higher(rough guess).

You will get getter results. I read this on 3 books about printing and scanning. My only trouble is getting my monitor calibrated properly.

Some of my prints come out lighter when i print.

oh well...

good luck




  
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roncor
Member
54 posts
Joined Dec 2002
     
Jul 16, 2003 05:54 |  #3

I use QImage from http://www.ddisoftware​.com/qimage/ (external link). You can set a Custom Size, although, I have not tried it myself. This program is very nice.




  
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PaulB
Goldmember
1,543 posts
Likes: 2
Joined Apr 2003
Location: Leeds, Yorkshire
     
Jul 16, 2003 06:04 |  #4

Don't confuse image resolution with printer resolution - they are not the same.

It is generally accepted that for photo quality output a digital image needs to be 300dpi.
This resolution is the ideal and can be lower depending on the image subject/contrast/fine detail etc but take it as an aiming point.
For a 10"x8" print we ideally need an image of size (10x300) x (8x300)dpi = 3000x2400dpi which is nearly what a 10D will deliver.
In practice the 10D (mine anyway) will print to A3 without problems.

Setting the printer to give best results depends upon the printer resolution - which is expressed in dpi but as an inkjet printer output is made up of dots of six colours, mixed as appropriate to form each dot, the printer resolution has to be much higher than image resolution in order that you do not see each individual dot but a smooth tone or transition from one colour/shade to the next.

This is why printer resoloution for photo output starts at 720dpi and goes up to 5760dpi on the latest printers.
However setting too high a printer resolution will not always result in better prints, just use more ink.
A good starting point is 1440dpi on the printer.
My Epson 1290 shows little difference even on A3 between 1440 and 2880dpi on most subjects.
Using too high a printer resolution on a low resolution image can make the finished print look pixelated because the edges of the individual pixels are printed too sharply.
Hope this helps




  
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Leighow
Goldmember
2,844 posts
Joined Jan 2002
     
Jul 16, 2003 15:19 |  #5

I have the Epson 880 .. but .. I also have PS.
***************

You mention poor, draft quality prints. For the 1st year or so, my prints were not really acceptable. This year, after reading all about "Color Management" on this site, when I print most G2 images they are quite close to what I see on the screen. Occasionlly black can be a problem, and I need to better understand why.

I should add that in my own case, I print only occasionally given that it costs $72 for refills. However, I alter every photo's size to suit its ideal crop. Of course I am limited to 8.5 by 11 inches.




  
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msvirick
Senior Member
257 posts
Joined Jul 2003
     
Jul 27, 2003 15:57 |  #6

ArcSoft PhotoPrinter will print your photos in any fashion and sizes with different dimensions.
Worth looking at it.


Canon 5D
Canon 10D
Canon S80
Canon 28-175USM
Canon 50mm
Canon 75-300 Canon 24-40
Canon 550EX
Tameron 19-35

  
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Printing Digital Photos
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