Very true. Not likely in this case though.You do not print at home to save money. You print at home to have full control of the end result.
Very true. Not likely in this case though.You do not print at home to save money. You print at home to have full control of the end result.
I agree that color management is a must in order to get the best results possible. When I save these presets I include paper type and printer in the name of the files, I do this at work for our large format imager witch does a good job for a inkjet (HP designjet). At home I have a good monitor, at work what you see is not what you get and that is when color work flow management becomes a must. My wife, at work they have a pair of dye subs, they have a bigger budget than we do.This is why you need a colormanaged workflow where you are working directly against the paper/ink combination on a calibrated monitor.
Again, this is not the cheapest or easiest (by far) rather the potentially best workflow.
How about this for luck.... Just saw this for free... I youtubed it and its 100% identical to Photoshop 9
Retails at around $150 but free this weekend
ACD Systems - Photo Editing Management Software
Think your right. Just tried it myself. The site I got it from says its photo editing. Sorry about thatI had a look and today it says "Video editing software," not printing. They might be rotating software.
Tomas talked about color management. But I need to speak up here on behalf of the OP. Let’s not overwhelm the guy with such advanced topics such as color managed workflow, monitor calibration, color spaces etc. The gentleman is trying to grok print sizes and cropping. Color management is challenging for even an advanced amateur digital photographer and often requires expensive calibration hardware. Let’s spare him the pedantry and let him enjoy the color he gets from his prints if they please him. And focus on the sizing issue at hand.In all of this discussion there should be some emphasis on color managed work flow either for custom printing at home, or outsourced to a service like Shutterfly, CVS etc.
This means using a color calibrated monitor to adjust your image to taste, a defined color workspace to do this in, sRGB is common, and if you are going to an outside service making sure that the digital image file is tagged with your selected color workspace.
I have had 3 Epson large format inkjet printers over 10+ Years, but have found that the image quality from both Shutterfly and CVS is so good that I no longer need to print at home to get what I want.
In all cases, you want the highest resolution you can get for output. 300 dpi is considered good for high quality prints, which will limit your output size.
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