Canon Pro9000 uses 8 colors of color dyes. Epson R2880 uses only 6 pigment colors plus light black and light light black. I did a comparison between photos printed by these two printers. I found that Canon Pro9000 still prints a little more vibrant on glossy photo paper. The difference is not obvious. You need to do close side by side comparison to see the difference.
I printed a same image for the comparison. I used Costco Kirkland glossy photo paper. On the Epson print I can still see some bronzing. Not objectionably obvious but comparing to the Canon print it is a little more. Being pigment based Epson R2880 is surprisingly good though. Dye based inks with Canon Pro9000 do have the advantage of wider in color gamut. But R2880 is very close and the archival property is a big advantage over Canon Pro9000. Honestly if I print a bunch of photos with both printers then mix all of them without marking I will not be able to tell which is printed by which without very close side by side comparison. One disadvantage of R2880 is it is still very slow. It took me on the average of 7 minutes+ to print a 8x10 photo in max quality. It usually takes half of that on a Canon Pro9000.
I am on a photography project to print a few hundreds of max size photos using 13"x19" photo paper and watercolor paper. I don't know how much ink I will need. I plan to get 1 liter for each color of the 9 colors of ink the printer uses. Actually the project involves a group of 50 - 100 amateur photographers. I am just the one in charge of the printer and ink. It will be a fun project. At the end of the project if the printer survives it may be sold to one of the members.
I printed a same image for the comparison. I used Costco Kirkland glossy photo paper. On the Epson print I can still see some bronzing. Not objectionably obvious but comparing to the Canon print it is a little more. Being pigment based Epson R2880 is surprisingly good though. Dye based inks with Canon Pro9000 do have the advantage of wider in color gamut. But R2880 is very close and the archival property is a big advantage over Canon Pro9000. Honestly if I print a bunch of photos with both printers then mix all of them without marking I will not be able to tell which is printed by which without very close side by side comparison. One disadvantage of R2880 is it is still very slow. It took me on the average of 7 minutes+ to print a 8x10 photo in max quality. It usually takes half of that on a Canon Pro9000.
I am on a photography project to print a few hundreds of max size photos using 13"x19" photo paper and watercolor paper. I don't know how much ink I will need. I plan to get 1 liter for each color of the 9 colors of ink the printer uses. Actually the project involves a group of 50 - 100 amateur photographers. I am just the one in charge of the printer and ink. It will be a fun project. At the end of the project if the printer survives it may be sold to one of the members.