HACKER Q&A
📣 frozencell

High quality digital art printing?


I need to print digital art (.jpeg) but most of the websites seem to be ads or spam blog posts. Does HN know some good addresses?


  👤 PaulHoule Accepted Answer ✓
Chains like Staples, Office Depot, Kinko's, etc. will print files that you send them and you can pick them up.

Drugstores such as Walgreens have an expensive large format printer but only stock glossy photo paper. Wal-Mart does photo printing too.

Some art looks good on glossy paper, but if you want matte go to the "office" chains.

Personally I own an inkjet printer and make decorative cards (both photo and art reproduction) regularly. I started the hobby with basic printers and came to the conclusion that: (1) a cheap inkjet printer does great work with quality paper and ink (don't mess around with off-brand ink), (2) if you print yourself you get an element of control that you don't get from the store. (Particularly if you want to get borderless prints just right)

I got my first printer for free until the pick roller gave out, bought an ET-4760, discovered that the ink fades rapidly in the sun, then I upgraded to an ET-8550 because of the better ink and ability to feed through the back which means no fighting the pick roller when you use particularly thick or thin papers.


👤 brudgers
Printing is an art.

Consistent quality printing comes from working with a printer…from a relationship.

Otherwise you get what you sent because ordinarily printing is a commodity service, and a business survives on commercial work not the occasional amateur.

Which is to say that getting what you want requires knowing what you are doing, paying to learn by making lots of wrong prints, or paying someone enough to care (and enough to educate you).

The first option might be off the table based on your asking the question.

The second and third options are most likely available with your local print shops.

Knowing the first name of your of your printer is perhaps a minimum for getting consistent art prints. Good luck.


👤 realslimjd
If you're in the US Reed Art & Imaging [0] is one of the best photo printing companies in the United States. They're (I think) the only commercial studio licensed to use the true Diasec process in the US. Diasec is what most museums prefer for their photo prints, just as a reference of quality.

I've also used White Wall [1] in Germany with similar results. They use basically the same process, but an unlicensed version. Bumblejax [2] in Seattle is also great.

The other thing you can look for is local camera stores that still develop film. Chances are they'll have a high quality printer and paper. Giclée printing (basically very high quality inkjet) is what's most popular right now and supposedly is the most durable, but I personally prefer chromogenic (C-type) prints which is where they use lasers to expose photo-sensitive paper. There aren't many places doing C-type prints anymore, so that's generally a mark of quality.

[0] - https://reedphoto.com

[1] - https://www.whitewall.com

[2] - https://www.bumblejax.com


👤 illwrks
Look for "Glycee" printers, they are basically fancy inject prints.

I had some prints done in the UK, onto archival paper, the print quality was fantastic. Depending on the source image your milage may vary though. I had prepped my own imagery and soft-proofed them prior to printing - I'm a designer so have a good understanding of what I'm doing.


👤 dtagames
Bay Photo[0] in California was an early innovator and is the best in the business. You can get real museum quality printing on canvas or other materials. Nice folks and a great user interface, too. I've used them for more than 25 years.

[0]https://bayphoto.com


👤 robcohen
This is something I've wanted to find as well, I searched awhile back for large scale printer services and I came up basically empty handed. If you search reddit, there are recommendations but to be honest most of them seemed kind of too expensive for me.

I'm planning to buy my own large format printer used on craigslist and learn to print large format myself. These printers are really expensive, and the heads can get gummed up easily but I'm hoping there's a way to make it pay for itself (renting it to friends, etc).

For anything smaller, you are probably better off finding a local photography printer and paying them, or just go buy an inkjet.


👤 pjbeam
I had a digital art portrait done of my wife and had it printed at a local fine art framing kind of place. It turned out beautifully! No clue where you live but you might look into such a place near you--the staff at mine were super knowledgeable to the point they asked the artist to change the color encoding/scheme/whatever (sorry no clue about this stuff) to make the colors pop more on the canvas.

It wasn't cheap but the results were worth it!


👤 PenguinCoder
The best online printing I've used is mpix.com. amazing products, great customer service, and good value. I've used them for basic 4x6 prints, larger photo prints, canvas prints, and even a few album books. Never been disappointed in the quality of what they give. You need to start with high quality photo images though, regardless of what you choose to get printed.

👤 shrubble
Adorama.com has good reviews by some.

I think asking on the dpreview.com forum for printing, or the photo.net forum is likely to get you good infirmation, from people who care about printing photos rather than signs.


👤 lurn_mor
shortrunposters.com is my go to for oversize printing.

👤 fat_cantor
smugmug