Beli buku saya – Mencetak gambar Anda adalah langkah terakhir yang penting untuk menghidupkan fotografi Anda. Dalam video ini kami akan fokus pada pencetakan saat kami membahas mengapa, bagaimana, dan biaya yang terlibat. Kami juga akan membandingkan foto yang dicetak pada printer kelas atas, printer kelas menengah, dan juga menggunakan lab online. Hasilnya cukup mengejutkan. Dapatkan uji coba GRATIS dengan Squarespace dan diskon 10% untuk pesanan pertama Anda dengan menggunakan kode penawaran FIRSTMAN – Lokakarya Percetakan Baru – 50% dari di PrintSpace – kode penawaran P707YYR (diskon maksimal £25) – Canon Pro 1000 – Canon Pro 300 – Pelajari Photography – Masterclass Fotografi Lanskap – Uji Coba GRATIS 7 Hari – Ikuti First Man Photography untuk pembaruan terbaru: Instagram – eBook GRATIS – T-Sirts dan Merchandise – Beli Cetakan – Workshop – Perlengkapan di bawah ini mungkin menarik bagi Anda. Mereka adalah tautan afiliasi yang berarti jika Anda mengikuti tautan dan memutuskan untuk melakukan pembelian, perusahaan memberi saya sebagian kecil dari penjualan yang membantu saya untuk terus membuat video ini secara gratis. Pengeditan Foto Loupedeck+ Konsol Pengeditan – Adobe Lightroom CC dan Photoshop – Pengeditan Video Uji Coba GRATIS Adobe Premiere – Musik – Filter Gear Kamera Saya – Canon 5D Mark IV – Manfrotto 055 Carbon Tripod – Manfrotto BeFree Carbon Tripod – Canon 16-35mm F/4 – Tamron 24-70mm – Canon 70-200mm – Canon 400mm – Canon 100mm L Macro – #photography #printing #spon .
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so much how much it cost to get a photo printed off by a company?
lol…. lost me at the 2min long intro
Will this video is not a side-by-side comparison I really wish you would have asked them to do the correct print or do another video so we can actually tell if there is a difference between the lab and your printer. I watch the video until you said that and then I just clicked off, there's no reason to keep watching it's not a side-by-side comparison I'm not sure if you did this on purpose since you're pushing Cannon or not since it's not a real one-on-one printout. Just by watching the lab print it looks washed out really wish you would have as for the correct print from the lab.
What an excellent video.
Canon large format printers like the Pro 1000 are money pits. I know. I bought one and it used more ink in its mandatory maintenance cycles than the prints that I made. I worked out that you need to be using it at lease once a day. It does these maintenance cycles every 60 hours regardless of how much printing you do. These cycles can us 30% of the ink in the cartridges, so it's quite possible to consume $500 worth of ink in two months must in cleaning and maintenance. The Epson's however are much more economical. I sold the Canon and bought an Epson P400 for smaller A3 prints and I send out my big prints to a lab.
yeah not paying a grand for a printer thats ridiculous not affordable
what happened to kodak paper do they not make it anymore. i want a photo paper that will last
im so lost hope this helps me ive no idea what to buy
I'll never buy another cartridge printer.
Printing is great, I decided to go for a cheap and easy setup to start. Canon IP8720 6 colour, it's one step below the pro series and prints 13×19. Prints perfectly on Canon paper from Canon software and a Canon camera, no editing required.
For most hobbyist, this printer wouldn't make any financial sense to be honest. However we still spend on expensive lenses and camera bodies all for the love for photography. A printer of this price point to me follows that same argument. Sending a print to a lab to print is missing out on the fun behind brining the picture to paper. I have seen a ton of people warn you about why getting this printer wasn't worth it.. All of them fail to realize to many the worth of something is beyond just financials.
Fantastic video, everything I was curious about printing explained in one video. Saved me the time of going down the Youtube rabbit hole. Thank you for this!
I can respect and enjoy learning photography from you. Your the first pro I haven’t heard say, “it’s not the camera or equipment that matters in making a photograph”. You obviously spare no expense and it shows in your beautiful work. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge.
Did I see the price of ink correctly? $700.00!! How often do you have to replace the ink supply?
Thank you for your explanation at the end. Now it makes since to me. You put into words what I never could about why I love my hobby. You’ve inspired me to become better. Thank you
It's always a pleasure and really inspiring to see and hear how enthusiastic you are about photography. I recently ordered a Canon Pixma Pro 200 and I look forward to making some nice prints with it.
Yes (in response to the question posed by your video title). I agree wholeheartedly and thanks for posting. There is a Zen-like joy when the print emerges that rivals that of discovering the potential image, pre-visualizing, recording, and getting the results you want in post-processing (I left out anticipating a photo session, heading out, etc.–come to think of it, photography is mostly a joyful experience!)…
Let's just get this out of the way: A photograph is a print, not a post. If you don't print, you're not a photographer. Full stop. Regarding cost, there's no price you can put on the thrill of printing, but if you print much, it doesn't take long for lab fees to exceed what you'd be spending to do it yourself (depending on the printer), plus you have control, which is everything. Regarding size, bigger is not necessarily better–it depends on the image, as many actually look better smaller, but of course others will look better larger. That said, there are relatively few cases where anything larger than A2 (17"x22") is really warranted (public spaces mostly, as few people have enough room on their walls to accommodate larger prints, or want to pay for them). In those cases, it's probably better to farm it out to a trusted lab (you can furnish them with a smaller proof/specify the paper and say "please match this"). That leaves the decision of which printer/papers. For archival prints, you need a pigment-based printer, such as the Canon seen here or an Epson (I have the P900, also A2, but most recent printers are quite capable). Read reviews before purchasing, but you can't go wrong with either of these printers. Of course, use quality paper (there are almost too many choices–I consider luster, baryta, and a few others essential). Most paper from the likes of Hahnemühle and Canson are great, but so are Epson's better grades (I can't speak to Canon–although I have one of their printers, it's dye-based). Remember this: Printing requires experimentation, and what you see on the screen (even on a calibrated monitor) will rarely match the print exactly. You will waste some paper, but that will decrease as you move up the learning curve–it's an art. There are also many instructive YouTubes out there (Keith Cooper's dedicated to this subject and is very thorough).
It's not an easy decision to go the expense of buying a printer. Your concise, comprehensive and human presentation leaves little doubt that giving space to the creative process, however costly, warms the heart and this is priceless.
You just compared having kids not making sense like buying one of these printers and there is a small chance that it will be all worth it….?
Your comparison to having kids 🤣🤣🤣
Great review.
Absolutely brilliant video. Very informative, Great content. Many thanks for sharing …
How do the exposure numbers in Lightroom correspond to a stop. In other words how much would be 1/3 of a stop?
The kid analogy was precious. I feel you my man.
Hi would you recommend the canon 200/300 or the epson et8500 i will print my digitalart and sell it .please can you one recommend me
"get out the door and do it all again" say no more.
Bro, we are here for a short ride, if lucky to see that ride through. Just enjoy the finer things if you can. Don’t want to depart this planet, wondering, if only !!!!
You had enough to hold me for 25:06 min.
loved your printing philosophy
Am I missing something here? If it costs £25.00 for a lab print and £5.00 ish for home print then 50 prints at the lab would pay for a printer canon pro 1000?. Excuse the vague guestimates!!
Thanks for the videos. What's the best (and cheapest) A2 printer printer today?
you have no idea how much i hate white border on photos!!!
Recommended to me by a long time ink and paper supplier, I use a Brother MFC-J5945DW. Granted I don't sell them, but using red river high gloss, and metal photo paper I can make up to 11×17 prints that rival any prints I've seen on the canon at a third of the price. Plus the ink lasts a long time, and isn't too expensive to replace.
OK so here is the rough maths, pls check and comment. If the A2 printer is £1000 and lasts 5 years without a repair cost, that is £200 per year in cost. A lab printed image is £25 with postage. The cost of self printing is £2.00 per print for ink and £4.00 per print for paper. That is a total of £6.00 per print. Take £6.00 off of £25.00 gives you a difference of £19.00 per print (i am going to round this to £20.00 to make the maths obvious. So you save £20.00 per print vs a lab. So if you print 10 times a year, then you have saved the £200 per year your printer cost.
This assumes no electricity costs, no print errors (reprints) either at home or with the lab, no printer breakdowns.
I’d say any serious amateur would print more than 10 per year, but that is a personal assessment. I’d also say at home you would reprint a little more often than with a lab as you will make mistakes, and choose to print a little darker/lighter on occasions.
Also I’d say that the ability to select your own papers, using smaller trial packs, have a print immediately (rather than plan in a lab lead time), iterate on versions (mono/colour) etc, all make the home printing a very controlled and satisfying experience. These last few items do add to you home printing cost.
So in summary, I’d say it’s closer to 25 to 30 prints a year to break even, but the experience at home is overwhelmingly better.
There looks to be more blue in the home printed images, is this a another print company variance, i.e. controlling colour?
I love printing my photographs, and I don’t mind paying the price. What I don’t like is paying for matting and framing. The cost of that is outrageous.
I got a Canon Pro-100 for free when I bought my G16 years back & I’m too scared to take it out of the box. I never learned how to edit & that’s probably the main thing holding me back. I guess I don’t want to waste the paper & ink if I’m not printing the best version of my pictures.
Have used pro labs that keep getting my prints slightly wrong, too much contrast etc. Will try printing myself. Thanks for the excellent video.
I believe screen and printer calibration (if you use your own printer) is really important and will prevent a lot of frustration. Laptops and many tablets can also be calibrated! I do a lot of printing at home, I create custom profiles for every paper I use, that along with a calibrated screen gives me great consistency and also repeatability, it also saves a lot of wasted time, paper and ink.
I agree, a photo only really becomes a work of art once printed, love your videos!
Lovely prints in this video mate love the work. Looking forward to seeing how far I can push my own printing business. All the best and thanks for the great videos
23.50 – the best bit 😁 “… a lot of great things don’t make sense, having children for instance …” 😜 Perfect 👍 Great video, lots of useful information by someone who is in the business himself and he is funny 😆 Thanks 🙏
Some photo labs also have ICC profiles you can install so in Lightroom when you softproof, your screen is quite close to the print you are ordering. I often get metal prints from Bay Photo. I do a proof on my canon pro-1000 on a glossy paper (with ICC profile) and when I get the metal print, it’s virtually identical to my proof.
Great vid
Thanks sir, nice and honest 🙏🌅❤️
I like your videos, first of all because you know how to explain thecnique with passion and the second place because I can understand you. You are able to tell your story clearly