Last month’s column discussed some technical aspects of how to prepare your digital images for printing. It also offered two options for making high quality prints, home inkjet printing, and professional printing at a photo lab. After some experimentation with large format printing of "gift prints" for the holidays, I have prepared a short "how-to" column about preparing and printing your images on the high-end Fuji Frontier.
For the past year or two, it has been possible to bring a CD of your photos to a lab for a technician to crop, color correct, and print. Unfortunately, this is costly, and depends on the judgment of the photo technician to crop correctly and render a "correct looking" underwater photograph. As many of us know, prints made this way often need to go back to the printer to correct the color to more natural tones as only us divers know what we saw under the waves. This trial and error repetition can quickly drive up costs and can take a long time. Fortunately, a new leap forward in technology now allows photographers to take control of their professional prints. A computer interface called a "photo-kiosk" can now be found in many of the larger photo labs. This device - made by either Kodak or Fuji depending on location - is directly tied-in to the Fuji Frontier photo lab behind the counter.
The photo-kiosk resembles a large computer with a touch screen and various
disk-drives. The machine I used recently could read photos from: CD-ROM, Compact
Flash, Smart Media, Memory Stick, SD Cards, and even the old PCMCIA flash media.
The machine reads the photos from the media, and allows the photographer to
select images to print, crop them for 8x10, color correct them, if necessary,
and then send them to the photo lab behind the counter. The machine takes your
name, and then prints out a receipt for you to take to the cashier for payment.
Depending on the size of the job, you can wait around to pick up the prints,
or come back the next day to pick them up. Perhaps the best part of this process
is that you only pay for the prints when you pick them up, and the cost is
incredibly reasonable. A 4x6 costs the same or less than a 35mm film print
and an 8 x 10 is considerably less. The results are stunning and literally
cannot be told apart from film prints. They are also printed on Fuji Chrystal-Archive
paper to last a lifetime.
I’d like to present a few of my recent "lessons learned" from printing 8 x 12’s on the Fuji Frontier.
As Seaspace approaches and our club prepares our show, I’d like to encourage our digital shooters to experiment with printing at the photo-kiosk. Not only can we put on a great slideshow, but we can prepare large format prints to show right alongside our Velvia shooters. It will only take a moment to see the potential of these wonderful new machines – both the digital camera as a photo tool, and the digital printer as a means to show off our work.
To discuss underwater housings, digital cameras, and strobes with other wetpixel readers, check out our message forums.
Yes, those are pretty cool professional prinitng equipment. I tired Kodak and I was impressed , it wasnt as good as what I expected nevertheless its a good one.
I beg to differ on this old post. Kodak now offers the same services, allowing you to use all digital/hard copy format copying with their Kiosks.
Please review the available options by visiting kodak.com or going to your local store to see the kiosk for yourself.
These kiosks are very well displayed, they have outstanding quality and a ton of options to boot.
Digital printing is an important part of any business that needs to either print their own advertising or for businesses that outsource their printing. Here is an overview of the digital printing process and important concepts such as digital printing versus offset printing, the CMYK and RGB color models, printing resolution considerations and full bleed printing. Printing Machinery