Title: April 2010: Understanding Your Photo Printer Post by: admin on April 13, 2010, 01:37:59 AM April 2010: Understanding Your Photo Printer
Why can't I print a photo that is as big as the entire sheet of paper?
Limitations such as the fact that the print head must be able to accelerate and decelerate near the edges of the paper, and the fact that the roller can only guide paper a certain distance from the top/bottom dictate the margins. The smaller size is often referred to as the "printable area" of the page. Here's my article that explains the process in detail.
I checked borderless in the driver but now my prints are the wrong size or some of the edges are missing
Borderless printing comes with a new set of limitations. In order to print edge to edge (and top to bottom) with no gaps or white slivers at the edges of the paper, most printer drivers expand the size of your prints when you print in borderless mode. If you are using 8x10 paper and you are printing in borderless mode, your printer will actually expand that 8x10 to be larger so that parts of the print are actually printed beyond the edges of the paper! For example, your printer may decide to expand your 8x10 to 8.2 x 10.2 so that about .1 inch of the print is actually printed off the edge of the paper (many printers actually have a sponge to soak up the excess ink that prints off the edge of the paper). This is an "artificial" expansion because the user often cannot tell that it is happening: the printing software actually sends an 8x10 size but the driver then takes over and has a mind of its own, adding whatever amount of expansion it thinks it needs and therefore making the size bigger than 8x10. If this artificial expansion is not done and you try to print exactly 8.0 x 10.0 inches on paper that measures 8.0 x 10.0 inches, inevitably you'll end up with a print where a tiny sliver is cropped off on one side and a white sliver appears unprinted on the opposing edge. The reason is that the paper loading mechanisms in printers are not exact. If the paper loads even a small fraction of an inch or a fraction of a millimeter too far to the left or right or if the paper isn't perfectly "square" or it doesn't load perfectly parallel to the guides, you'll notice immediately. Any error at all will result in cropping on one edge and unprinted paper on the opposing edge. The expansion (and printing beyond the edge of the paper) is a way to mitigate this problem.Unfortunately, this artificial expansion always occurs no matter what size you are printing which causes a slightly different issue if you try to print multiple prints on a borderless page. If you print two 5x7 prints on an 8x10 sheet of paper for example, the 5 inch side of the prints will be expanded to about 5.1 inches each so you'll end up with part of the left edge of one print being cropped off (it will print beyond the left edge of the paper) and part of the right edge of the right print on the page being cut off (it will print off the right edge of the paper). Here's my article that explains the ins and outs of borderless printing in detail.
When I print a large print, pieces of my print are missing or the page prints blank
Some other questions I often get as author of Qimage
Mike Chaney Title: Re: April 2010: Understanding Your Photo Printer Post by: gejmessmer on June 21, 2012, 11:42:10 PM Hi Mike
This is George Messmer in Port St Lucie. I have used Qimage Pro for a long time on a limited basis. I like so many others, have struggled through the 2 megapixel sensor Point and shoots (Nikon 950) and improved through the D100 and now the D300. I continue to search for a way to print reduced pixel images (6 megs and the 12megs) as a way to enlarge subjects by cropping down. This effort is a result of my bird photos which because of my location is just too far away. My Nikon lens, 80-400 on the D300 is great, but I still need to crop down to get a decent image size and composition to print out a 13x19 on my Canon i9900 printer. I am on the threshold of buying your new Qimage Ultimate because of your hybrid interpolation formula. Is there a procedure that I could use to print a 4x6 at the output level of 13x19, hoping that the 4x6 would show a cross section of the 13x19 and in doing so, telling - hey go ahead and print this at full size. I hope I didn't muddle this narrative up, and maybe oversimplified a more complex issue. Thanks in advance for your help. George Messmer Ps I have read your 2008 article "Interpolation Revisited". I understand many of the issues, and even though the D300 increases the pixel size, I have some nice D100 and 950 shots that I would like to print on my Canon i9900 printer. Title: Re: April 2010: Understanding Your Photo Printer Post by: Fred A on June 22, 2012, 10:46:12 AM Quote I am on the threshold of buying your new Qimage Ultimate because of your hybrid interpolation formula. Is there a procedure that I could use to print a 4x6 at the output level of 13x19, hoping that the 4x6 would show a cross section of the 13x19 and in doing so, telling - hey go ahead and print this at full size. The new interpolator in Ultimate is called Fusion and you will appreciate the results On the second part, the answer is YES! Assuming I fully undertand what you are asking. You want to make a small test print of what the image will look like in print had it been printed at 13 x 19 size, There's a routine in Qimage called TEST STRIP. You find it in the Page editor. You can do step by step using the HELP FILE. This routine will hold the ppi of the 13 x 19 as it reduces the print size to your 4 x 6 size. You use some 4 x 6 paper, and tell the printer too. Make your small print and it will be as if it was the 13 x 19. Fred Help says: "Test Strips - Before printing large prints and committing large amounts of paper, printing a small section of the large print can be helpful for the purpose of judging detail, sharpness, and color. There is a "Test strip" function on the full page editor that will allow you to create a small, proportional print that contains a piece of the larger print. From the main window in Qimage, start by adding the photo you wish to print at the desired final size (20x30 inches for example). Then click the "Edit Page" button below the preview page, select the print on the page, click the "Cropping" button on the right and the "Test strip" button will be visible under the small crop window. The test strip button can be used in any of the following ways: You may repeatedly click the test strip button to make your test strip progressively smaller until you have a size as small as you like. You may click the test strip button once and then change the size of the print manually using the sizing functions on the main window. Once the test strip button is clicked, that print remains a test strip which will conform to a piece of the original size print until you remove the print crop or manually move the crop zoom lever in the page editor. You could, for example, start with a 20x30 inch print, click the test strip button, and then choose a new size of 4x6. Since the print has been identified as a test strip, the 4x6 print will be a 4x6 portion of the 20x30 print! The area of the 20x30 print shown in the 4x6 can be adjusted by simply dragging the crop in the page editor or using the high precision cropping tool in the page editor. You may select a smaller paper size (4x6 for example) and add your large print to the queue, specifying that it is OK to create a poster larger than one page. Then simply click the test strip button in the page editor once and the test strip will automatically be resized to the size of your (smaller) paper. The crop can then be moved manually to any part of the print using the cropping tool in the page editor. Note that while left clicking on the test strip button will make the test strip smaller, right clicking or Ctrl-clicking on the test strip button will make the test strip larger" Title: Re: April 2010: Understanding Your Photo Printer Post by: Fred A on June 22, 2012, 11:07:40 AM George,
I am over on the other side of the state in Sarasota, and I experience the exact same issue. Great bird shots which are sort of far off. Need to crop for both bringing the subject out larger, and also to compose nicely. I have learned over the years that Qimage will make wonderful prints given even 100 ppi, Pixels per inch! Less than that, you can see some compromise. Fred |