Title: March 2005: Size Matters: Paper Size vs Print Size
Post by: admin on May 27, 2009, 03:37:26 AM
Size
Matters: Paper Size vs. Print Size
Background
This month we deal with another
topic that seems simple on the surface but can get rather
complex when you actually start dealing with it. In this
article we uncover some differences in how paper is
handled by printers and we'll learn how to avoid some
common problems that can leave you rather surprised at
the difference between the size you chose to
print and the size that actually comes out of
the printer.
How your printer sees your
paper
Loading a sheet of 8.5 x 11 paper
into your printer seems like such a simple thing. You
might be tempted to think that your printer sees the same
8.5 x 11 paper that you see and that it should be able to
print any size print up to 8.5 x 11 on that paper.
Unfortunately it is rarely that simple. Most printers
default to a mode that can only print on a portion of
that 8.5 x 11 paper. Your printer for example, may only
be able to "address" an 8.0 x 10.7 inch portion
of the paper. To make matters worse, the 8.0 x 10.7
rectangle that is available for printing on the 8.5 x 11
paper is usually off-center meaning that you could print
something as large as 8.0 x 10.7 but if you do, it will
not appear centered on the page.
So you've fed a sheet of 8.5 x 11
photo paper into your printer only to discover that the
printer can only use an 8.0 x 10.7 inch area on that
paper, leaving uneven borders around the edge that the
printer sees as inaccessible. The reason that your
printer cannot print in these edge/border areas is due to
physical limitations of the printer itself. The print
head must have enough time to accelerate for example and
get up to a constant speed before spraying ink and must
decelerate at the opposite side of the page, creating the
left/right borders. The paper itself must be able to load
and be moved accurately by the rollers, which creates the
top/bottom borders. These limitations mean that there is
a "printable area" on the page that is smaller
than the paper itself, and that this printable area is a
an area inside which the printer can operate optimally to
produce the highest quality prints. There are often
driver options that can affect these limitations, so read
on.
Understanding print driver
jargon
We already mentioned some
limitations which may not allow you to use an entire
sheet of paper from edge to edge and top to bottom. These
limitations cannot be overcome by printing software
because the limitations are part of the printer's
physical design. If you are willing to live with some
compromises, however, they can sometimes be overcome or
changed by selecting certain options in the print driver.
Let's take a look at some common print driver options
that allow you to change the printable area on a given
page.
Note that not all
options are available in all drivers
No options checked:
If none of the options below are checked, it is
likely that your printer will only be able to
print to a portion of the page as described above.
If you do not specifically select any options
most printers will have a border along all 4
edges ranging from about .1 inches up to possibly
.6 inches. This leaves you with a maximum print
size that is smaller than your paper size of 8.5
x 11. Note that some drivers call this default
printable area "maximum" in contrast to
"centered" below.
Centered:
Some drivers have a "centered" option.
This option simply adds more margin to the
default margins so that the printable area is
centered. If the default margins for top and
bottom are .3 on top and .5 on the bottom for
example, the "centered" option will
simply add .2 inches to the top margin so that
both the top and bottom margins are .5 inches.
Obviously this option has an undesirable side
effect in that it will always reduce the size of
the printable area. In our example, unchecked you
might have been able to print 10.7 inches tall
and now with "centered" checked, you
can only print 10.5 inches tall.
Borderless or
"no margins": Many newer
printers offer a "borderless" mode
activated by checking the "borderless"
checkbox in the driver, usually under the "Page
Setup" tab in the driver. Checking this box
actually activates quite a number of features
along with some compromises. Note that borderless
mode may not be available (selectable) for all
paper sizes and all types of paper, so you may
find the option disabled when you are printing on
8.5 x 11 paper while it is available for 4x6, 5x7,
and 8x10 paper. All printer models are different
in which paper sizes and paper types support
borderless printing. Borderless mode, if it is
available for the paper size you are using, will
allow you to print on the entire paper surface,
but doing so will create a number of issues to be
aware of (see "The borderless conundrum"
below). Note that "no margins" is
similar to borderless except that "no
margins" generally only removes the left/right
margins: top/bottom margins remain.
The borderless conundrum
We've discussed how most printers
and print drivers behave in their default configuration
and that you will likely not be able to produce a print
as large as the full paper size you are using. Many newer
drivers, however, offer an option called borderless
printing. Borderless printing basically allows you to put
ink on the entire page without having any white space or
"borders" on the left, right, top, or bottom.
Activating borderless printing by checking "borderless"
or "no margins" in the print driver, however,
does more than just allow your printer to access the
entire page, and creates a new set of issues to deal with.
Quality:
Most of the time, print quality will decline near
the edges of the paper. You may be warned about
this when you select borderless in the driver.
Honestly, I've never seen any noticeable decline
in print quality except some slight banding on
older printers. The difference in print quality
in the middle of the page versus the edges is
subject to many factors including printer model
and the type of paper being used.
Overspray:
First we have to realize that paper loading
mechanisms are not perfect. There is some "slop"
when your printer loads the paper and it can be
off by as much as 1mm left-to-right when loading
and the paper rarely aligns perfectly parallel
with the guides. This slop in the mechanism means
that if you were to print a 4x6 print on 4x6
paper, you would end up with tiny slivers of
white on one side and a tiny sliver of the print
missing off the other edge. The bigger the print
size, the harder it is to keep the paper aligned
through the entire printing process. To overcome
this problem, most drivers create some overspray
which actually prints part of your photo off the
edge of the paper onto a sponge. That way, if the
paper slips a bit one way or the other, something
is still being printed all the way up to (and
beyond) the edge of the paper, thus eliminating
white slivers at the edges of the paper.
Expansion:
If you print a photo at 4x6 inches on 4x6 paper,
for overspray to be able to account for slack in
paper loading, there obviously must be some
expansion (enlargement) of the image. In reality,
your 4x6 photo has to be expanded to something
like 4.2 x 6.2 inches so that about .1 inch of
the photo prints off the edge of the paper. This
is where most of the confusion begins with
borderless printing. Due to the fact that your
print driver expanded your 4x6 print and is
printing part of the photo off the edge of the
paper, there will be some cropping of the image
at the edges. Some print drivers allow you to
adjust the "amount of extension" but be
aware that most drivers will not allow you to
turn expansion (AKA extension) off completely
because doing so usually results in small slivers
of white on one or more edges.
Print size
surprises: Due to the way print drivers
enlarge images when borderless mode is selected,
your prints will always be a little larger than
the size chosen. This is usually not a big
problem if you are printing one photo that covers
the entire page such as a 4x6 on 4x6 paper
because the fact that the photo is slightly
enlarged to 4.2 x 6.2 and a small sliver of the
photo is missing at the edges will go unnoticed
unless important parts of the photo are very
close to the edges. If you decide to print four 3x2
prints on borderless 4x6 paper, however, you will
notice that your 3x2 prints are a little larger
than expected due to borderless size expansion.
You may also notice that a small piece of your 3x2
prints is missing along each edge of the paper
because the side adjacent to the edge of the
paper will have some "overspray" that
printed beyond the edge of the paper. These
issues can be confusing when exact cropping and
sizing are needed. It can be very difficult to
obtain exact cropping and sizing when using a
print driver in borderless mode.
Printer
maintenance surprises: If you are
someone who prints almost everything in
borderless mode, you may eventually be surprised
with a printer maintenance message after printing
thousands of borderless prints. Most printers
keep track of how much ink is being sprayed onto
the overspray sponges or overspray tanks and you
may get a message that the printer needs
maintenance to clean/empty the sponge/tank that
holds the ink overspray. You may not even be able
to continue printing until the maintenance is
performed. The counter that tells the printer
when the overspray sponge/tank might be full is
only incremented when borderless mode is being
used so be aware that excessive borderless
printing may actually result in extra printer
maintenance. Please don't email me and ask how
many borderless prints you should expect before
this happens because I have no idea and I do not
believe that information is readily available.
:-) I only know from experience that I've seen it
happen on inkjet printers from more than one
manufacturer.
Some borderless printing
tips
Borderless printing is
usually fine if you are printing a single photo
per sheet such as one 4x6 on 4x6 borderless paper,
one 5x7 on 5x7 borderless paper, etc. The fact
that the driver slightly enlarges the photo so
that some of it prints beyond the edge of the
paper is of little consequence for most snapshots.
You should probably try to
avoid borderless printing if being able to get an
exact crop (an exact portion of the image) or
being able to print at a specific size is
paramount. When important details in the image
lie near the edges or there is a frame that is
being printed around the image, remember that
your print is being "stretched" a bit
so it won't be exactly the size that you
specified and also remember that your frame or
other important details near the edge of the
photo may be cut off slightly. Borderless mode is
also not recommended when printing posters that
span multiple pages because it is likely that the
edges of your poster will not align properly.
Many Canon print drivers
offer a selection called "amount of
extension". If you slide the "amount of
extension" slider all the way to the left,
you can actually disable the driver expansion but
be aware that doing so may cause small slivers of
white border to appear on your paper because the
paper cannot align exactly every time. Most other
non-Canon drivers do not allow you to completely
disable the print size expansion but some allow
you to select less/more overspray which equates
to less/more expansion.
Qimage
has an option that allows you to disable
borderless print expansion even if the driver
does not allow it to be disabled. You can click
"Page", "Borderless Overspray/Expansion"
and then choose "disable" and Qimage
will reverse the effects of the print driver
enlarging your photos. While disabling overspray/expansion
will ensure that your prints print at exactly the
size chosen, you will be subject to the slop in
the printer's paper loading mechanism and you may
see some small slivers of white along one or more
edges. If your printer's paper loading mechanism
is consistent in that it always loads the paper a
little too far left creating a tiny white sliver
on the left of the page, you can compensate
using margins in
Qimage. With a little
experimentation, this method of borderless
printing will allow you to get exact sizes
without the driver's artificial enlargement and
will also allow you to eliminate all but the
thinnest sliver of unprinted white border.
Whether your driver allows
you to disable expansion completely in the driver
or you do it with software such as Qimage, be
aware that with expansion disabled, you will now
be printing exactly the size that you specified.
Printing exactly a 4x6 on paper that is exactly 4x6
inches means that any slop in the paper loading
mechanism is going to show up on your prints as a
white sliver on one side and a sliver of the
image missing off the opposite side. Loading more
sheets of paper or even a different brand paper
may cause paper to load differently which can
cause the slop in the loading mechanism to change.
In general, you can usually remove all but a tiny
hairline margin that may or may not be bothersome
depending on the type of work you are doing. Just
be aware that disabling borderless expansion has
its tradeoffs.
Summary
Your printer has some inherent
physical limitations that will likely not allow it to
print over the entire surface of the paper you are using
regardless of paper size. These limitations are recorded
as unprintable margins which are reported to printing
software. Printing software will honor these limitations/margins.
Unprintable margins can be eliminated by using borderless
printing mode, if available in the print driver, but
borderless printing opens up a new set of potential
problems such as unwanted print (size) enlargement and
cropping due to overspray and expansion by the driver.
Being aware of the limitations of each printing mode as
they relate to what you can actually print on your paper
will help you avoid surprises when printing.
Mike Chaney
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