kully
Happy Snapper
There are myriad different options and all the posts so far have spoken wisdom.
It took me ages to figure out what I needed - consider it the same as trying to figure out a darkroom for the first time.
Colour calibration. Yes, it makes a difference. I bought a Spyder3 Elite, now my prints are consistent i.e. I know what I will get on the paper given what is on the screen.
I have a Epson R2880 which I am using with Hahnemuhle Photo Rag 308gsm paper and the Hahnemuhle provided printer profile. The B&W is neutral and lovely.
The Epson R3880 works out cheaper in the long run as the ink tanks are bigger, but I didn't have the room for it in my house.
I had some problems until I realised that in the printer driver I needed to switch off colour calibration and enable it in Photoshop.
Whatever you decide, get a colour calibration tool.
It took me ages to figure out what I needed - consider it the same as trying to figure out a darkroom for the first time.
Colour calibration. Yes, it makes a difference. I bought a Spyder3 Elite, now my prints are consistent i.e. I know what I will get on the paper given what is on the screen.
I have a Epson R2880 which I am using with Hahnemuhle Photo Rag 308gsm paper and the Hahnemuhle provided printer profile. The B&W is neutral and lovely.
The Epson R3880 works out cheaper in the long run as the ink tanks are bigger, but I didn't have the room for it in my house.
I had some problems until I realised that in the printer driver I needed to switch off colour calibration and enable it in Photoshop.
Whatever you decide, get a colour calibration tool.