![]() ![]() The capacity of the ink cartridges was very low.Switching Photo Black and Matte Black inks was not really user friendly.Feeding is often the week point with many printers. ![]() ![]() Paper feeding was not very reliable and for fine art papers very quirky.Unfortunately there were some issues we did not like that much: The Epson Stylus Photo R2880 could print at about the same level if it comes to pure print quality. But up until now the 17" Pro printers were more robust and more fun to use on a daily basis. Smaller prints are really nice unless you plan to cover huge walls. Especially if you don't have the space for a larger printer (although the Epson 3880 is quite compact for a 17" printer). Most of the time we are just happy to use 13" wide printers. We think the last couple of iterations by Epson were more incremental because the print quality of their inkjet printers has been excellent for some generations now.įor fine art photographers there are actually three main segments of printers: 13", 17", 24" and wider. We use Epson pigment based fine art printers for over nine years (our first was the P2000) and had them from 13" to 24" wide. Part of the Outback Photo Handbook: Output/Printing Please Visit the all new Digital Outback PhotoĮxperience report by Bettina + Uwe Steinmueller ![]()
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