Thursday, June 7, 2007

How do I know when my 9600 is dying?

I common question I've been getting recently is...
How do I know when my 4000 is not fixable?
When is my 7600 need to be replaced?

Epson printers and their permanent print heads come with both advantages and disadvantages. Advantage being they're perfectly calibrated when they leave the factory. Disadvantage being they cost more to replace then the printer is worth. Typically, after three to five years, depending on print volume, noticeable quality loss we begin to appear on your 4000/7600/9600. Replacing printheads will cost at least $1,000. Having a certified technician visit your place of business: $500 minimum.

This $1,500 is not worth it to save one of these printers, even for a 9600. Time to upgrade. Maintain your current workflow by getting a 4800/7800/9800, or consider a 12-ink from the HP Z series line.

Once quality begins to decline, expect to start doing a LOT of head cleaning. You can still get up to a year or so of use out of the printers from this point on before they really eat the dust. I recommend upgrading at the first sign of quality deterioration and saving you old printer for banners/posters/signage (anything that can get away with a little less than perfect output).

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Winning the war against Double Management (part 1)

One of the dreaded terms often heard between tech's and artists alike is double management. While a good RIP software (or CS3 or a good printer plugin) will eliminate this problem, I figure I'll add my two cents before it becomes an obsolete issue. For all of us not lucky enough to afford a RIP or CS3, which has been me in the past, here we go...

There are just too many places where you can select the same options for your prints. Depending on your printer manufacture/model, I count up to four. Yes, four. (I assume Photoshop CS2 or below for the rest of the article) For starters, there is the Print Preview and associated Page Setup. When you select your printer in Page Setup, it will give you the nice "preferences" button next to it. Click on that and you'll be brought to a place to select seemingly identical info. Don't think that choosing the correct settings here will let you neglect to set the preference from the actual "PRINT" dialog box. Once you have all your settings correct up through the PAGE SETUP>>PRINT PREVIEW, we are brought to the actual PRINT dialog.

Now in Print, you will see the list of printers as well as the preferences button again. Depending on how well your computer runs/what you've done since Print Preview, some of the settings may have decided to change back to their default. This ruins prints quite quickly.

The fourth place for some of us is on the LCD display of the actual printer. Some, such as Canon's iPF series, prompt you for information such as the media type and media size. One more place to double manage/make a mistake. One advantage of CS3 is that it will merge the past 3 dialog boxes together to a single screen, making it about three times easier to print with the correct settings...

(Continued Tomorrow)

Friday, May 18, 2007

Adobe CS3 Creative License Conference -- Review

On Wednesday (5/16/07) I was lucky enough to be at the HP Booth sponsering the Adobe conference for the release of CS3. Overall the show was very impressive, CS3 looks very promising. One of the most impressive benefits I saw was Photoshop's new 3D ability. The demostrations really showcased some inovative things. I was also excited about the new combination of "Page Setup" and "Print Preview," finally making printer settings more intuitive and powerful. This should really take a lot of the guesswork and prevent the dreaded "double management" for issues from Portrait vs. Landscape to Printer vs. Photoshop color management.


Lots of great people at the shop, I would highly recommend going if one is coming near you (8 city tour, 1 or 2 day events). Also a great networking opportunity for anyone involved in creative professions.

http://www.adobecs3conference.com/

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Giclee Seminar - Tomorrow in Chicagoland (Free!)


IT supplies is hosting a Giclee seminar tomorrow (May 16th, 2007) in Schaumburg, (NW suburb of Chicago). Its free, appears to be sponsered by Epson, and will feature local artists showing Giclee tips, tricks, and a basic overview of the Giclee process. Its running from 1PM - 7PM, I will try and catch the end of it if I can get back from the Adobe CS3 Conference in time (unfortunately, not Free). Should be a good time.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Review of Photo Tex (Repositionable Printable Fabric)


After seeing a profile for Photo Tex on Colorburst's website (looking for 3800 profiles...), I remembered reading about this product a few months ago and meaning to try it. So I tracked down two sample rolls, 24" by 5' each. This product, invented by South Korea, is similar to a standard 2 ply inkjet printable fabric crossed with an industrial strength post-it note. They claim that photo-tex will never lose its stickiness. Now never is a long time, but from my 30 day test, they don't seem to be lying. I repositioned the printed square I had cut (approx. 12" x 12") twice a day for 30 days on a wide variety of surfaces, and it is still sticking. It picked up a little debris from my brick wall, but not enough to negate its sticking power. Impressive. Even after being submerged in water for 3 days, it still stuck to anything I placed it on. With no damage. Even more impressive. Photo-tex states it will not damage anything it is placed on, making it an ideal product to place on your late 18th century library's wooden walls.

As for the printing, it doesn't 'pop' as much as I was hoping, but overall color is good. Bright reds seem to be effected, I printed my samples on a Canon ipf8000 which usually does well with signage. The printing does not seem to wear off over time or fade, another plus. The blacks are moderate. I would not print any sort of fine art on this material. Worth checking out if you have any type of POP or instore marketing clients.

Overall, I was very pleased with the material and am anxiously awaiting a chance to use it commercially (it is a bit on the expensive side). Much like Post Its when they were first released, Photo-tex aren't sharing their adhesive secrets or any of the technology behind this product.

-Michael

Photo-tex website - www.phototexgroup.com
picture from photo-tex website

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Need a web designer?

If anyones in need of a web designer, I would highly recommend Jesse Crouch (jessecrouch.com). As well as being a talented photographer, he is an excellent designer and coder. He designed my current site (elevateprinting.com) as is in the process of writing all of the code for a custom shopping cart. He also has some interesting articles on low budget photography (a few of them we're on digg) as well as a gallery of his work at ifakedit.com. Examples of his webdesign and coding are at jessecrouch.com.


-Michael