TechCamerasHow can I print high-quality photos at home?Want to print high-quality photos at home? Here’s how!When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
TechCamerasHow can I print high-quality photos at home?Want to print high-quality photos at home? Here’s how!When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
Want to print high-quality photos at home? Here’s how!
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Getty)
(Image credit: Getty)
We’ve all spent much more time at home these past couple years – perhaps more time than we’d have liked – but that time on our hands has finally allowed many of us to sort through a heap of photos on our hard drives and camera rolls and decide which, if any, are worthy of displaying as a print or preserving as a physical keepsake.
While there’s a plethora of local camera shops and minilabs offering click and collect services, as well as dedicated online photo processing sites that will process our orders and post them back to us, there’s a chance that our renewed enthusiasm for photography has prompted us to consider printing at home. And not just digitally; recent times have also witnessed a renaissance in the shooting on and processing of film, with a ‘wet’ darkroom and trays of chemicals required – just like in those 1970s cop movies. The latter is much more complicated and involved than digital printing for sure, and involves a degree of trial and error, but for its acolytes, the labour and eventual satisfaction involved is very much part of the appeal.
In short, choosing to print at home, then, is choosing to be able to exert maximum control over the output and quality of our prints.
Be aware from the start though that printing at home will cost us more per print in terms of materials, not to mention time, than asking an online photo lab to do it for us instead. That’s because they are dealing in bulk, buying in bulk and so are making bulk savings, some of which are passed onto customers to generate business; we, typically, are not, cannot and won’t.
(Image credit: Getty)
(Image credit: Getty)
Digital photo printing at home
Photo printing starts with having a high-quality image to print in the first place, and choosing to print it at a size that will expose its detail, without exposing its flaws.
In this age of 50-megapixel cameras that shouldn’t be a problem at all – even if shooting basic JPEG rather than top quality Raw – and, in any event, it’ll soon become clear when we attempt to print if our image isn’t up to snuff and we need to re-size, re-edit or think again.
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Once armed with our inkjet printer of choice, and having installed a fresh supply of inks, the next task is to choose our print media in question. For most people this will come down to a choice of glossy (shiny) or matt (plain) surfaced photo paper – with the manufacturer of our printer typically recommending we use their own brand, the reasoning being that their printers’ inks are optimized for use with their inkjet paper. Selecting the optimal setting on your printer is also key. While choosing photo quality, rather than draft mode, is obvious, make sure you’re also selecting a print quality of at least the standard 300dpi – dots per inch, or pixels per inch – to keep print quality looking sharp.
We probably don’t need to get into colour spaces and debate between RGB and CMYK here, and at consumer printing level this typically won’t come up at all, except to say that CMYK is the preferred option for when printing. Those of us who want to delve deeper into home printing may additionally like to consider a monitor calibration device of some sort, such as a Datacolor Spyder, so that what we see on screen in terms of colours is exactly replicated when it comes to the finished print, and we achieve a like-for-like match.
(Image credit: Getty)
(Image credit: Getty)
Film printing at home
Unfortunately, or, perhaps, thrillingly, for the novice or aspiring enthusiast, this means buying a load of equipment at once, as well as, if going the full hog, setting aside a backroom or walk-in cupboard to create a light-tight space; in other words one which is pitch black and where any intrusion of daylight can be 100% avoided.
To develop film at home, before you can even think about printing, you’ll need your exposed film, a developing tank with reels, a dark bag for loading the film onto the reels and of course developer fluid. Once the film spool is retrieved from the tank, the strips of negative will first need to be allowed to dry, before prints are attempted. As we can see this is something of a more involved, time-consuming process – and something that digital photography and the introduction of the digital darkroom – or home PC into the process – was supposed to make a heck of a lot easier. Still, there are those who prefer the more mindful, meditative approach to image creation.
Verdict
Printing at home can be as straightforward or as complicated as we wish to make it – depending on the scale of our ambition for our prints. A huge part of the appeal, especially when it comes to printing from digital, is near-instant results and output, along with the ability for us to exert hands-on control over every part of the process – acting as, in effect, our own quality control department.
Liked this? If you’re also thinking about upgrading your camera then we’d suggest you take a look at our guide to thebest mirrorless camera,best DSLRandbest compact camera.
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