Posts Tagged ‘inkjet prints’

Digital Photo Printing Tips

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

Digital Photo Printing Tips

Photographs taken with film can fade with age, but digital photographs retain the same colour and clarity every time you view them on your computer screen. Your digital photos will last forever if you take good care of them. Below we have some helpful tips for storing, displaying printing and archiving your digital images.

Inkjet printers that are especially configured for printing colour photographs will offer 6 or more colours to provide superior colour graduation as well as colour matching. If you are planning on printing lots of photographs you should consider purchasing an inkjet printer which has separate ink cartridges for each colour and includes special photo inks.

The kind of ink and photo paper that you use can have a significant effect on the lifespan of your photograph. The standard photo ink for inkjet printers will typically last a maximum of 20 years. Inkjet photos always fade faster than photos done in a photo lab or a digital photo printing booth. Photo labs use a special ink that is archival quality and can last well over 100 years. Kiosks use a dye-sublimation process where layers of film are fused onto a special paper. These are more expensive but the prints that are produced are dirt and water resistant and last up to 5 times as long as inkjet prints.

If you are looking for excellent quality photo prints, you should use the glossy photo paper that is recommended by the printer manufacturer. These photo papers are always configured to work best with the printer’s inks to offer the top quality and longest lasting photo prints.

Photo Storage Tips

Memories will fade but you don’t want this to happen to your digital photos. No photo print is going to last forever and contact with artificial and natural light, pollutants in the air and the humidity of the environment in which the print is stored will cause it to fade over time. You should always avoid storing photos in direct sunlight; it is not even a good idea to store photos under a bright light indoors. Harsh light can cause the ink to break down and the pictures will quickly begin to fade. Also avoid heat, like sunlight heat can cause the ink to break down faster then normal. It is best to store your photos in a cool, dark area where you won’t need to worry about temperature fluctuations. You will need to avoid humidity; it’s obvious that water is bad for pictures but humidity can permanently damage your digital prints and speed up deterioration. High concentrates of pollutants and ozone in the air with significantly increase deterioration in your digital prints. Even if you live in an area with low pollution, it’s still not a good idea to leave your prints constantly exposed to the air.

The best way to protect your digital prints is to put them in photo albums with clear protective covers. The clear covers protect the photos from moisture and air pollution and keeping them inside the album prevents fading and exposure to light. If you don’t fancy using photo albums, you should find sealable containers to store photos in as they will also protect your digital prints from light, moisture and pollutants. Regardless of which photo storage method you use, make sure you keep the albums or containers in cool, dark places to avoid temperature fluctuations.

A print displayed on a brightly sunlit wall may fade faster than you would expect it to. Similarly, a print displayed behind glass will last considerably longer than one in contact with the air. You can extend the life of your printed photos by putting them in frames with glass panels.

Digital Photo Printing Tips

Monday, July 5th, 2010

Digital Photo Printing Tips

Photographs taken with film can fade with age, but digital photographs retain the same colour and clarity every time you view them on your computer screen. Your digital photos will last forever if you take good care of them. Below we have some helpful tips for storing, displaying printing and archiving your digital images.

Inkjet printers that are especially configured for printing colour photographs will offer 6 or more colours to provide superior colour graduation as well as colour matching. If you are planning on printing lots of photographs you should consider purchasing an inkjet printer which has separate ink cartridges for each colour and includes special photo inks.

The kind of ink and photo paper that you use can have a significant effect on the lifespan of your photograph. The standard photo ink for inkjet printers will typically last a maximum of 20 years. Inkjet photos always fade faster than photos done in a photo lab or a digital photo printing booth. Photo labs use a special ink that is archival quality and can last well over 100 years. Kiosks use a dye-sublimation process where layers of film are fused onto a special paper. These are more expensive but the prints that are produced are dirt and water resistant and last up to 5 times as long as inkjet prints.

If you are looking for excellent quality photo prints, you should use the glossy photo paper that is recommended by the printer manufacturer. These photo papers are always configured to work best with the printer’s inks to offer the top quality and longest lasting photo prints.

Photo Storage Tips

Memories will fade but you don’t want this to happen to your digital photos. No photo print is going to last forever and contact with artificial and natural light, pollutants in the air and the humidity of the environment in which the print is stored will cause it to fade over time. You should always avoid storing photos in direct sunlight; it is not even a good idea to store photos under a bright light indoors. Harsh light can cause the ink to break down and the pictures will quickly begin to fade. Also avoid heat, like sunlight heat can cause the ink to break down faster then normal. It is best to store your photos in a cool, dark area where you won’t need to worry about temperature fluctuations. You will need to avoid humidity; it’s obvious that water is bad for pictures but humidity can permanently damage your digital prints and speed up deterioration. High concentrates of pollutants and ozone in the air with significantly increase deterioration in your digital prints. Even if you live in an area with low pollution, it’s still not a good idea to leave your prints constantly exposed to the air.

The best way to protect your digital prints is to put them in photo albums with clear protective covers. The clear covers protect the photos from moisture and air pollution and keeping them inside the album prevents fading and exposure to light. If you don’t fancy using photo albums, you should find sealable containers to store photos in as they will also protect your digital prints from light, moisture and pollutants. Regardless of which photo storage method you use, make sure you keep the albums or containers in cool, dark places to avoid temperature fluctuations.

A print displayed on a brightly sunlit wall may fade faster than you would expect it to. Similarly, a print displayed behind glass will last considerably longer than one in contact with the air. You can extend the life of your printed photos by putting them in frames with glass panels.

Canon Pixma iP4600 printer review

Friday, March 26th, 2010

Canon Pixma iP4600 printer review

Canon’s range topping A4 PIXMA inkjet printer makes creating beautiful long lasting prints quick and easy, with extra media handling features for added versatility. Below is an in depth product review taken from Channel Five ‘The Gadget Show’.

The Basics

Canon’s range-topping inkjet photo printer produces photo-quality prints in approximately 20 seconds. Thanks to PictBridge technology you can print direct from compatible digital cameras. It has a max speed of 26 black and white pages per minute and 21 colour pages per minute.

The Good

Why spend hundreds on a sparkling high-resolution camera and then print out photos on the plasticky inkjet you got free with your computer? Canon’s flagship photo printer treats your masterpieces with the respect they deserve, lavishing on them five separate inks (including a rich dye-based black) that should shimmer fade-free for over a century. Picolitre drops mean pin-sharp detail, and you can swap out individual cartridges (and even the print head) to keep running costs under control. It’s great at text printing, too, firing out crisp documents at 12 pages a minute.

The Bad

This is a stripped-down photo-making machine, with none of the all-in-one extras like scanning, photocopying or even printing direct from memory cards (although there is a PictBridge port). It’s not wireless like many of the newer printers, either.

The Bottom Line

Less of a computer accessory than a photographer’s best friend, the iP4600 dishes up some of the tastiest looking inkjet prints we’ve seen – and at a superb price.

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