Houston, We Have a
[Printing] Problem!
Background
In developing and
supporting my photo printing software,
Qimage,
I often end up helping a lot of people with printing questions and
problems that aren't related to any particular software but correspond
to broader printing concepts. In this article, I'll try to cover
the most common things that can go wrong with photo printing and will
suggest solutions to those problems. Due to the wide variety of
printers, papers, and inks available, it is more common to get
"surprises" when printing photos than when displaying them on screen,
sending them via e-mail, or performing other operations. Printing
software like Qimage can make the job of printing photos much easier,
but some of the variables that affect the appearance of your prints
between the software and the paper can be confusing and difficult to
identify since they have nothing to do with the software that printed
the photos. Let's take a
look at some common stumbling blocks and see if we can take some of the
mystery out of them.
Wrong colors
First and foremost, make sure your printer is really printing the wrong
colors! If your print driver has a "print preview" option,
never trust the colors you see in the preview! You must
print a real print and evaluate it since the colors you see in the print
preview (in the print driver) are raw colors intended for the printer
and you are viewing these raw colors on screen. Assuming you have
really printed the prints and you have problems with the physical prints
on paper, read on...
Probably the most common issue with photo printing is sending your
photo(s) to your printer only to discover the colors look wrong, or at
least "different" than the way they appear on screen. To be able
to fix such problems requires that you know what the colors should
look like! Color problems can be obvious, like when a blue sweater
looks purple, or a bit more elusive such as when a flower looks a little
redder in print than the pinkish hue on screen. When evaluating
subjects like flowers, it can be difficult to judge which version is
more "accurate" especially when the subject is no longer available.
This is why it is important to make sure your on-screen image is
accurate before deciding that the problem is with the printed version.
In some cases, the print may be more accurate than the monitor if you
haven't profiled or at least calibrated your monitor. Monitors are
usually easier to calibrate/profile because you don't have to deal with
things like different types of paper and lighting. Making sure
that your monitor is displaying the right colors is therefore the first
stepping stone to accurate color. For more info on how to
calibrate or profile your monitor, see
this article which has some references to monitor profiling
software.
Once you have your monitor displaying
the proper colors and you know that you have a real problem with printed
color, you have some options for addressing printed color(s).
First you must make sure you have selected the proper paper type.
If you are using paper from the manufacturer of the printer, this is
usually a simple task of dropping down the "paper" or "media" selection
and selecting the paper you are using. If you are using third
party paper, however, you may have to refer to the documentation that
came with the paper as far as the proper settings to use for that paper.
If no documentation for your printer model was included in the package
of paper, you may have to try
several selections for paper type in the driver to find the one that works best! Normally you
would start with the paper that most resembles the paper you are using.
Obviously if you have a glossy paper, limit yourself to the glossy paper
selections and if you are using a matte paper, limit yourself to the
matte paper selections and so on. The best way to determine
whether or not you've selected the right paper type is to print a
colorful test print using different paper type selections (and with print quality
set to the highest level in the driver). If you see unexpected
color shifts, graininess, or ink clumping, blotching, or pooling, keep
trying until you've found a paper type that minimizes these effects.
If the effects cannot be eliminated, you may have to consider the
possibility that the paper you chose is just not compatible with your
printer (this is uncommon but not unheard of).
Once you've selected the best paper
type for your paper, some color issues may remain. Unfortunately
without downloading or creating an ICC profile specific to your printer,
paper, and ink, your only option may be to try some trial-and-error
changes in the print driver. Selecting "File", "Printer Setup" in
most applications will take you to your print driver where you'll have
access to things like color controls, color spaces, print quality, and
other options. You can try changing color-related options in the
driver such as changing from "Color Control" to "sRGB" print mode or
vice versa on Epson printers, using different "Color Adjustment" modes
on Canon printers, or fiddling with different selections on the "Color"
tab on your HP printer. Each driver puts a different spin on how
you control color, so the process for adjusting color is really
hit-or-miss using this method. The only way to ensure accurate
color is to have a custom profile made for you or use a profiling tool
such as my own Profile Prism
software to create a color profile yourself. Some printers come with ICC profiles for different
papers but they are often not specific enough to render truly accurate
color on your printer and are often supplied with little or no
documentation on how to use them. Since color management and
application of profiles can be a complex issue,
here
is another article that covers the problems you may have when using
color management (printer profiles) if you decide to go that route to
get color dialed in.
Output is grainy
Another common complaint about printed photographs is that the photos
look grainy. If you are using an inkjet printer, your printer
produces photos by spraying a very fine pattern of small dots on the
page. With the latest inkjet printers, these dots are normally so
small and so closely spaced that you cannot detect them with the unaided
eye. Unless there is a problem that caused noise or grain in the
original photo (such as using a high ISO speed), visible grain in prints
can normally be traced to either a problem with the media or improper
driver settings. First be sure you are using the appropriate paper
type selection for the paper you are using (see "Wrong colors" section
above). Some papers do not work well with all printers and many
times when photos look too grainy, you may have simply gone too far when
looking for "cheap" paper or you may be using a paper that simply
doesn't work well with your printer. Don't take "compatible with
all inkjet printers" too seriously when reading the paper package as
being "compatible" doesn't necessarily mean it will work
well with
your printer! When all other variables like paper type
and quality settings have been ruled out and you still have trouble,
consider trying another paper like one of the papers made by the same
manufacturer as your printer. Often times just switching paper
will cure the grainy print problem.
Next check your print driver settings using "File", "Printer Setup" and
make sure you have the highest quality selected. This may entail
selecting "Best Photo" quality, selecting the highest resolution number,
and/or sliding a quality slider to the highest quality. You want
to stay away from options like "Draft", "Text", "Standard" or "Normal"
as those options usually indicate that you have not selected the best
print quality. Sometimes just going through the quality options in
your print driver and manually selecting the highest quality options
will reduce graininess in printed photos if your print driver tends to
default to a more "mediocre" quality.
Also be aware that some people are
more sensitive to grainy prints than others. I've seen some prints
that wouldn't even pass for photos in my opinion (I call them
"printouts" rather than "prints"), and it always amazes me that some
people can't see the grain in the same print! A lot depends on
eyesight (near vision), lighting (grain is more noticeable in very
bright light) and other factors. Finally, keep in mind that some
portable (mostly 4x6) printers and printers that can print without a
computer may not use the highest print quality available if you just
insert the memory card from your camera and print directly. I've
found some of these "standalone" printers to be grainy when printing
directly from the card but substantially better if connected to a
computer where you can override the defaults in the print driver and
select higher quality output settings. Few if any of these
standalone printers are set up to output at the highest quality when
printing directly from memory cards.
Banding
Banding is a general term for any type of aberrant straight lines that appear on
your photos whether they are vertical or horizontal. There are
actually many causes for banding but the most common are clogged nozzles
and poor print head alignment. The print head on an inkjet printer contains
dozens, hundreds, sometimes thousands of tiny holes where the ink is
sprayed onto the page. If even one of these little nozzles becomes
clogged, banding can occur. Most print drivers offer a "nozzle
check" option where you can see if any of your nozzles are clogged and a
"clean" option where the nozzles are cleaned with a high volume ink
spraying cycle. Another cause for banding can be print head
alignment. If you've done a nozzle check and you have determined
that no nozzles are clogged, you might want to check your print driver
to see if it has an option for "print head alignment". If it does,
you may have to go through a process for this manually or your printer
may have an automatic option for head alignment. If the nozzle
check looked good and the print head alignment didn't fix the problem,
I'd recommend going through at least one cleaning cycle anyway.
Believe it or not, clogged nozzles sometimes don't show on a nozzle
check and a single cleaning cycle may correct the problem.
Yet another cause for banding is the
use of third party inks that have slightly out-of-spec flow rates or
viscosity. I've seen more than a few cases where banding was
caused by problems with third party inks. Sometimes the ink will
flow without a problem for a while and then banding will occur at the
bottom of the page, right side of the page, or even only in areas of
thick, saturated color. In cases like these, the ink may be having
trouble flowing at a rate high enough to keep up with the demand at all
times.
Ink flow problems and physical problems with the print head can be very
difficult to diagnose. They can occur at strange times, in strange
areas of the print, and the banding can even be worse when using
software that optimizes print quality because lower quality printing
software may hide the problem by not taxing the printer to its limits.
In any case, when banding occurs, look for a physical problem with the
printer or ink itself even if the problem seems to only appear in
strange places and/or only appears when using certain software or driver
settings. The printing software is almost never the cause of banding as
banding is usually a sign of some type of hardware failure.
Partial prints,
all-back, or no prints
Another common printing problem is finding out that not all of your
prints printed, pieces of the prints are missing, or some/all of your
prints printed as solid black rectangles. All of these problems
are caused by your print driver not being able to handle the amount of
data being sent to the driver. Some print jobs, particularly those
that have been optimized for quality or those that contain large prints
or many smaller prints, put a heavier burden on the print driver.
For this reason, you must ensure that your print driver is set up to
handle larger jobs. Two very common solutions are:
-
Go to control panel, printers and
faxes, and right click on your printer and select "Properties". On
the "Advanced" tab, make sure "Enable Advanced Printing Features" is
not checked! This option, simply put, was never meant
for photographs and does not work properly when printing large photos or
printing many photos to large pages. Second, press the "Print
Processor" button and make sure the spool type is set to "RAW" with no
other options. This tip alone accounts for over 90% of problems
with missing prints or pieces of prints.
-
If you still have problems and/or you
have problems only when printing larger prints, check the "effects" type
options in your print driver. Some drivers have trouble with
effects when dealing with large prints because they simply cannot handle
applying those effects to larger prints. HP printers for some
reason are more prone to this problem than others. Check the "HP
Digital Photography" area and make sure that none of the effects are
checked, particularly any that have the word "auto" in them. These
options often get "confused" when doing large or optimized printing.
For additional tips when printing
large photos or large jobs, see
this article.
Prints are the
wrong size
If you ever print a specific size such as 4x6 and you don't get what you
expect, first check the paper itself. Did you print borderless on
4x6 paper and the print was either cropped more than expected or
isn't big enough for the paper? First check the size of the paper
with a ruler. Sometimes the paper you bought isn't exactly 4x6 (or
5x7, 8x10, etc.)!
It seems silly, but I've seen this happen more than a few times.
If you print a specific size and only one side is the correct size, you
may need to crop some of the image to get the size you want. Some
software will do this for you with the click of a button while others
make you do this cropping step manually. If you print a 10 x 8 for
example and your print ends up 10 x 6.67 where only one side is the
wrong size, you may just need to crop because the aspect ratio of the
image doesn't match the print.
If you sent one size to the printer
and it ended up printing proportionally larger or smaller (in both
dimensions), it may be due to an option in the print driver. Be
aware that borderless printing often results in size expansion so if you
are printing in borderless mode, your prints will actually be expanded
so that they print slightly larger than the size specified. With
borderless printing turned on in the driver for example, it isn't
uncommon to send a 4x6 print to the driver only to get a print that is
4.2 x 6.2 inches. This
can sometimes be controlled with the "amount of extension" option in the
driver but cannot always be turned off completely unless your printing
software (such as Qimage) offers an override. Options like "fit to page", "enlarge"
or "reduce" also will modify the print size without you being aware of
the change.
Here
is an article that deals specifically with potential print sizing
problems.
Prints fade quickly
Longevity/permanence of prints is a widely studied, complex, and often
misunderstood topic. There are sites on the web where you can find
longevity data and they might have even tested your particular model
printer and the paper and ink you use. The problem with most of
these tests is that there are a lot of factors involved and few of these
sites tell you about what affects longevity of prints. These
longevity testing sites can and do give you information about which
papers are better for ink permanence but they often don't test many
combinations. Generally, if you have a "normal" inkjet printer
that isn't labeled "lightfast", "archival", or "pigment", you probably
have a printer that is using dye based inks. Dye based inks tend
to fade rather quickly if the print is exposed to (in direct contact
with) circulating room air and/or is in a room with bright lighting such
as direct sunlight. Your average inkjet printer just wasn't made
for archival purposes so if you put some prints on your refrigerator and
the sun swipes over them every morning, don't expect them to last long!
It's as simple as that. Outgassing and exposure to light can cause
the fading so if you mount your photos behind glass (like in a photo
frame) and not in direct sunlight, they will last years/decades.
Take them out and expose them to the environment and you are asking for
trouble.
Pigment printers are normally called
archival or lightfast and use pigment inks as opposed to the faster
fading dye inks. Prints produced by pigment/archival printers will
last much longer than prints from a dye based printer when exposed to
the environment but even these archival prints will do better behind
glass. As a general rule, if you want your prints to last, put
them behind glass or in a protective sleeve like the ones found in most
quality scrapbooks. And if you are really into scrapbooking and
you want to know if your prints from your inkjet printer are acid/lignen
free, the answer is no! Even if you buy acid free paper, the ink
itself will not be acid free. In addition, normal photographic
prints that you get from a photo developing outfit are far from acid
free and they aren't known to cause major problems with scrapbooking, so
there's really no need to overdo it trying to fool with acid free inkjet
papers. Of course, if you are a purist, I'm sure you could find
acid/lignen free paper for about three times the cost of your regular
inkjet photo paper but it probably won't look as good and will it really
make a noticeable difference in the long run? I'd say no, but
that's just my view.
Summary
Hopefully this article will be a good
cheat sheet for those having trouble printing their digital photos.
My goal was to try to help show the way for people who get unwanted
surprises when they try to print their photos. The
photo-to-printer path is actually quite complex and there are a lot of
potholes in the road to getting good digital photos. You may get
lucky and your prints may be acceptable the first time you print.
Certainly that was the intent of the manufacturers: for you to plug the
printer in and print with no issues. With the variety of printers,
drivers, paper, and inks on the market, however, it is more likely that
at some point you'll run into at least one of the problems listed on
this page. As you move forward and get more involved with your
photography over time, you may find that what was acceptable for your
first prints isn't that good any more. You'll tend to be more
discriminating the more you print. Such is life in any hobby or
profession. I hope this page can be of some help no matter where
you are on that road.
Mike Chaney