Problem with photo printer
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Good,
my father was brought a photo printer by the kings, an HP ENVY 110, after doing some tests the prints (with HP paper) both in A4 and 10x15 'went' to green, the tones that had some green went to that color to a greater or lesser extent. Thinking that it could be the original cartridge and as it had already been spent doing tests, I bought a new one last week, but the XL version (300XL) and not only does it not improve but the print quality has been even worse.
Now they give me the option to return it, exchange it for another or choose another model.
Given what I have seen, I almost prefer to choose another brand/model. Any suggestions? -
Must it be photographic?
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¿Fotográfica debe ser?
the idea is that it should be for printing photos on photographic paper and without borders, so unless there is one that allows you to do that without being photographic...
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I have 2 printers that I have tried and I think are good, at work I use the Samsung CLX 3185 it is a color laser, I have not printed a photo but it prints very well in color, and then the inkjet is the WiFi multifunction printer DCP-J925DW I saw it print and it looked good take a look, I don't dislike the Brother brand I had an HP Photosmart one day that I don't remember the model but it printed photos well but I hated the HP software. -
hello, the million dollar question: is a photo printer worth it? considering ink and paper, because I don't see it very clear :nono:
regards -
if it's for photography, EPSON is the best
Epson Expression Home XP-405 WiFiregards
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hello, the million-dollar question: is a photo printer worth it? considering ink and paper, i don't see it being very clear :nono:
regardswell, probably not, but since it shouldn't be for printing large quantities in the first place and my father was really pushing for the photo printer, well…
if it's for photography, EPSON is the best
Epson Expression Home XP-405 WiFiregards
it seems that in the end the printer is fine and it was the photo we used to test it :ugly:
a photo that changes tone depending on the type of light it gets…
i hope it's just the photo and not the camera :ffu: -
Leaving color management to the printer or the photo editor can also affect... and editing photos on a poorly calibrated monitor is a whole other story.
I've had an HP and now an Epson. My personal experience is that for photos, the HP is better, for the rest of the prints, the Epson.
Epson's unicorns must be from a breeding farm, because the cartridges are cheaper :facepalm:Best regards
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Epson's unicorns must be from a breeding farm, because the cartridges are cheaper :facepalm:
In high-end ranges, probably not anymore, but in low-end ranges, HP sells you the cartridge and the injector all in one, and Epson only sells the cartridge, hence its lower price, but if the injectors break in HP, you just have to change the cartridge and not send the machine to be repaired.
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be careful with color spaces
monitor calibration, printer calibration, etc...
also keep in mind that a monitor's ability to display colors is far superior to any printer...good luck with the printer
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