Fenrir Enterprises
Print Addict
- Joined
- May 17, 2006
- Messages
- 372
- Reaction score
- 14
- Points
- 153
I have been running an Epson R220 for everyday printing and an Epson R340 for photo printing. The R220 I converted to aftermarket pigment when I got it, the R340 has been running on OEM cartridges. I still have about three sets of cartridges left. The R220 died and I'm currently in the process of modifying a Workforce 1100 to be the replacement "everyday printer". I also picked up a 1400 with the intent to change it to pigment to print gicles on matte paper and canvas. I now have the opportunity to pick up a second (used) 1400 for $100. I have been considering getting it and putting a dyebased CIS on it for glossy photo printing. I am curious as to whether there is any significant difference in quality between the R200-R340 generation of printers that were pre-Claria and the R240 and higher ones, or if it is pretty much the same and I'd need an 8+ color printer to see any massive quality increase. I've never had a problem with the R340 but I do wonder if I'm better off switching to a Claria printer for quality purposes, especially if I wind up selling enlargements. I know the higher priced Epsons have pigment inks, but they also have a gloss optimizer tank which wouldn't be replicable with the 1400 (I also wonder about the color gamut of photo printing with pigments... most artists I know who do in-house printing only use their pigment printer for art prints, not photographs). I don't really care about the UV resistance claim on Claria inks (what, they last two weeks outside in the sun vs one week?), but up until recently, most refill companies flat out said that their dyebased aftermarket inks were not Claria quality. Now they're advertising Claria-equivalent inks and anything I print would be on good paper and be framed or in an album.
I feel ridiculous buying so many printers but I really can't do what I want to do with a single one of them (Workforce 1100: Everyday high volume printing and menus/signs/banners to sell, Photo 1400 w/pigment: higher quality matte-only art/poster/canvas printing, cannot be used for everyday printing since you can't ICC the pigment inks in Microsoft Office, Photo 1400 w/dye: glossy photo enlargements).
I feel ridiculous buying so many printers but I really can't do what I want to do with a single one of them (Workforce 1100: Everyday high volume printing and menus/signs/banners to sell, Photo 1400 w/pigment: higher quality matte-only art/poster/canvas printing, cannot be used for everyday printing since you can't ICC the pigment inks in Microsoft Office, Photo 1400 w/dye: glossy photo enlargements).