Finding a place that will allow me to print 36X24 and give me control over the final look is turning out to be a huge problem. Does anyone have any suggestions about a good solution? I'm looking to spend no more than $5K.
HurtinMinorKey said:Finding a place that will allow me to print 36X24 and give me control over the final look is turning out to be a huge problem. Does anyone have any suggestions about a good solution? I'm looking to spend no more than $5K.
HurtinMinorKey said:Thanks so much for all of the quick responses!
I expect to make a dozen or so prints a month. Office depo, Cotsco, doesn't make prints from what I've seen in the past. But maybe things have changed recently.
The local place where i lived in NC had a IPF750, i think, and that seemed to work very well for large prints. I've never tried Bayphoto, but it might be worth a shot.
Does anyone know how the iPF 6400 compare to the IPF750? (besides 36" v. 24"). Is it just an older version?
mackguyver said:I also recommend BayPhoto - they have excellent service and cheap and very protective shipping, too. The other lab I use is Aspen Creek Photo, and between the two I've never had to redo a print. The key is using a good color-managed workflow, however, starting with a good calibrated monitor. If you don't have a good monitor and don't calibrate it, you'll never be happy with your prints.
HurtinMinorKey said:mackguyver said:I also recommend BayPhoto - they have excellent service and cheap and very protective shipping, too. The other lab I use is Aspen Creek Photo, and between the two I've never had to redo a print. The key is using a good color-managed workflow, however, starting with a good calibrated monitor. If you don't have a good monitor and don't calibrate it, you'll never be happy with your prints.
Thanks! Do you have a preferred way to calibrate your monitor?
Halfrack said:Next, check out the X-Rite ColorMunki: http://xritephoto.com/ph_product_overview.aspx?id=1115
privatebydesign said:If you are going to use the printer regularly, honestly, print with it at least twice a week, I can't recommend the Epson Professional Imaging printers highly enough. If used regularly they just print, every time, perfectly. Running costs are modest too when you look at per square inch print costs.
For 24" I'd recommend the 7900, it has the 11 ink set, and auto black change over. It is the bigger cousin of my work horse 4900 that is the best "small" printer I have ever owned.
eml58 said:Printing yourself is 1/2 the fun of Photography.
privatebydesign said:eml58 said:Printing yourself is 1/2 the fun of Photography.
After printing as a teenager in my blacked out bedroom 35 years ago, I couldn't agree more. People spend thousands on lenses yet baulk at a few hundred in paper and ink, yet it is so rewarding. Printing is what keeps my enthusiasm for photography alive.
eml,
Knowing you like the best, I don't know if you have seen these, https://www.solux.net/cgi-bin/tlistore/colorproofkit.html I got a set last year and it really helped the printing. I got a 3' x 6' sheet of metal painted white that I hung on the wall and I use to proof my prints on, you can get a great brightness balance with the metal and your screen and I use magnets to hold the prints, fantastic setup.
P.S. By coincidence I had the Schewe ePub open, great reference, particularly when you have been away for a few weeks.
lux said:I'm a long way from printing my own though I have moved from cheap prints at walgreens to using my local camera store with very nice improvements. I have a monitor that was supposedly calibrated in the factory (came with documentation I didn't really understand) I usually ask for no changes to be done on the print.
Would it be even better if I used color profiles and costco...?