desantnik
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 9,848
- Name
- Vlad
- Edit My Images
- Yes
At the WTCC meet I saw Canon demo'ing their Selphy dye-sub photo printers. I was quite impressed, the helpful chap even printed a couple of my pics from the day and they looked quite good.
So came home and ordered myself a cheap(ish) ES-1 from the interweb.
Printed a couple, looked fine (well, as fine as a 6x4 would do)...
Then I noticed that with an extremely rare (for me) perfectly framed shot I was loosing some of the picture.
Carefully examaning the Canon "Easy photo print" software it was indeed showing me a nice red line around my pic indicating printable area.
Spoke to Canon's helpdesk (who are as useful as a chocolate teapot btw - I have never used them before..) and they told me (predicatably) that it was "my software" and to either print direct from my camera or via the flash card reader in the front of the printer.
Tried both, makes b****r all difference.
I am loosing approx 100 pixels from both the left and right edges plus some from the top and bottom - haven't measured but its probably 50 or so.
Makes little odds with anything I get normally, but just occassionally I get something really beautifully 100% framed.
Canon have just now told me its to do with the difference between "6x4" prints from their printer and the native resolution of their EOS cameras.... which is a pile of crap as I have verified that photoshop is perfectly happy to make a 6x4 100% crop of my photo.
I think the problem is that to make it "borderless" it overprints left and right (there are little edges you snap off to make your 6x4 photo). Consequently it crops top and bottom to match too and keep the proportions.
In a nutshell, I'd recommend you avoid these things unless all of your photos you'd want to print have an area you want randomnly cropped off all the sides!!
Thanks Canon :thumbsdown:
So came home and ordered myself a cheap(ish) ES-1 from the interweb.
Printed a couple, looked fine (well, as fine as a 6x4 would do)...
Then I noticed that with an extremely rare (for me) perfectly framed shot I was loosing some of the picture.
Carefully examaning the Canon "Easy photo print" software it was indeed showing me a nice red line around my pic indicating printable area.
Spoke to Canon's helpdesk (who are as useful as a chocolate teapot btw - I have never used them before..) and they told me (predicatably) that it was "my software" and to either print direct from my camera or via the flash card reader in the front of the printer.
Tried both, makes b****r all difference.
I am loosing approx 100 pixels from both the left and right edges plus some from the top and bottom - haven't measured but its probably 50 or so.
Makes little odds with anything I get normally, but just occassionally I get something really beautifully 100% framed.
Canon have just now told me its to do with the difference between "6x4" prints from their printer and the native resolution of their EOS cameras.... which is a pile of crap as I have verified that photoshop is perfectly happy to make a 6x4 100% crop of my photo.
I think the problem is that to make it "borderless" it overprints left and right (there are little edges you snap off to make your 6x4 photo). Consequently it crops top and bottom to match too and keep the proportions.
In a nutshell, I'd recommend you avoid these things unless all of your photos you'd want to print have an area you want randomnly cropped off all the sides!!
Thanks Canon :thumbsdown: