Photo Printers Reviews

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Photo Printers Reviews

Best Photo Printers Reviews: (out of 20)
PrinterInfo.com, The Star Online: TechCentral (Malaysia Technology), PrinterSpot.com

Best Photo Printers: (out of 14)
Epson PictureMate Dash PM 260, Canon Selphy ES1

Fast Answers - Best Photo Printers
Top Rated What the Research Says
•  Epson PictureMate Dash PM 260
   (*est. $100)

>> Where to buy

Best photo printer overall.

The Epson PictureMate Dash is the latest in Epson's line of top-rated photo printers. We easily found the best reviews for PictureMate photo printers. The Dash has higher resolution and prints faster than the competition; Epson claims prints take as little 37 seconds from the Dash PM 260. The PictureMate Dash has a nice-sized 3.6-inch LCD display for previewing photos. Ink and paper costs bring per-photo cost to about 25¢ -- the lowest among photo printers. Reviewers say prints are consistently near lab quality. Editing tools include the ability to crop photos and adjust brightness levels. A battery pack (*est. $50) is available to make it truly portable, but at 5.3 pounds, the PictureMate photo printer is quite heavy. (compare prices)
•  Canon Selphy ES1
   (*est. $140)

>> Where to buy

Best dye sublimation printer.

While most reviewers see the greatest accuracy in prints from the Epson PictureMate series, several reviewers prefer the output from the Canon Selphy ES1, a dye sublimation printer. Some prefer dye-sub printers for their more saturated (some say oversaturated) prints. The PictureMate Dash is much faster and less expensive to run, however. Without special storage or care, prints from the Selphy ES1 will endure beyond a human lifetime. The ES-1 has a 2.5-inch LCD display. It's capable of wireless printing. The ultra small footprint creates odd paper feeding, but reviewers say it works. Maximum resolution is 300 x 600 dpi. The ES1 weighs about 4.5 pounds, but has no handle. Ink and paper costs work out to about 30¢ per photo. (compare prices)
>>  Comparison Chart

Full Story
What the experts say, our analysis, and more...
Updated October 2007

The best reviews for portable inkjet and thermal-dye (also called dye sublimation) photo printers directly compare and show reproductions of actual size and enlarged prints from multiple printers. PC Magazine no longer does that, but new review website PrinterInfo.com comes close in that regard and provides far more comprehensive photo-printer reviews. The website of Malaysian newspaper The Star publishes a comprehensive comparison of four portable photo printers from four brands. Descriptions of relative photo quality are exceptional and all buying considerations are evaluated. PrinterSpot.com, a newer enthusiast website, uses photo reproductions from reviewed personal photo printers and their competitors as a centerpiece of its comparative reviews. Reviews by Steve's Digicams sometimes include print reproductions, but the reviews are otherwise inconclusive. PC World and Consumer Reports both evaluate a lot of photo printers, but primarily limit reports to charted data and opinion.

Dedicated personal photo printers print 4 x 6-inch snapshots directly from your digital camera without needing a computer. We've seen them reviewed as portable photo printers, compact photo printers, mini and snapshot printers. If you want a photo printer that can print snapshots as well as 8 x 10-inch photos and text pages, you need a regular inkjet printer, which can do all those jobs. See our separate report on inkjet printers. Photo-print quality between the small-format portable photo printers discussed here and the full-sized models in our other report is comparable, according to some reviews, but others say the full-size printers produce better photo quality. However, the printer manufacturers aren't expecting you to choose between the two types of printers. The mini models are marketed as specialty printers for portable use.

For the most part, experts say you can expect good photo quality from snapshot printers. We found mixed reviews for many photo printers, but only TrustedReviews.com gives the Lexmark P350 (*est. $140) a high rating. Most reviewers are unimpressed with image quality. In the British magazine Computeract!ve, Jonathan Parkyn summarizes, "The P350 produced some of the worst-looking prints in our test, with washed-out colours and some kind of weird graininess present in the image." PC World describes the issue as banding. IT Reviews, PC World, Macworld, CNet.com and PC Magazine all complain that the printer is slow.

The less expensive Lexmark P450 (*est. $100) also fails to impress reviewers. It's unique in that you can't connect it to a computer, but it has a slot for CDs and you can print directly from CD (as well as cameras and memory cards). In PC Advisor, reviewer Spencer Dalziel says, "Quality is no match for the thermal-dye competition - all images were suffused with a background hazy grain." TrustedReviews adds that "print quality didn't compare well with Lexmark's rivals." As with the Lexmark P350, TrustedReviews, IT Reviews and PC Magazine all note that this is an unusually slow printer. The Lexmark brand earns the lowest reader rating in the PC Magazine Reader Satisfaction Survey.
 ... Continued
Consensus Report

Our Consensus Report shows how many times products are top-ranked by reviewers included in our
All The Reviews Reviewed chart.

# of Picks Model (with retailer links) Details from Amazon.com
5 Epson PictureMate Snap PM 240 (discontinued) details
3 Epson PictureMate Dash PM 260 (*est. $100) details
2 Canon Selphy ES1 (*est. $140) details
1 each HP Photosmart A516 , Canon Selphy CP720 , Kodak EasyShare Photo Printer 500, Sony DPP-FP90 , HP Photosmart A716 , EasyShare G600 Printer Dock , HP Photosmart A626 , Epson PictureMate Zoom PM 290 , HP Photosmart A826

Experts and photographers have preferred the photo quality from Epson printers for many years and the newest generation of Epson portable photo printers is no exception. We also found many reviews that give top ratings to Epson photo printers that were discontinued during 2007. When reviewers prefer models from other brands, the reasoning is usually based on features. For example, the HP Photosmart A826 is marketed as a photo kiosk. It has a 7-inch touch screen and is simple to use.

If you prefer a dye-sublimation printer, reviewers like the Canon Selphy ES1. It’s slow, but the print quality is very good.

In general, HP printers fare best in features-oriented reviews. Kodak and Sony printers receive mixed reviews, but the Kodak models have some issues and are often recommended only for mating with Kodak cameras. Reviewers find polite ways of saying that all other brands produce better quality than Lexmark photo printers do.

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Photo Printers Reviews