Kodak EasyShare 5300 All-In-One (AIO) Printer

8 Rating

An easy-to-use printer/scanner/copier for family snapshooters.Kodak is really pushing the cost savings message with its first consumer all-in-one inkjet printer, the EasyShare 5300. Even before you unpack it, the box is emblazoned with bubbles claiming ‘Save up to 50%’ and listing the ink costs: $14.99 for the black cartridge and $24.99 for the colour. These messages are repeated on a sticker that covers the top panel of the printer itself.

HP Photosmart D7460 Printer

8.5 Rating

An easy-to-operate printer for home or small business use with dual trays for A4 and snapshot papers.HP’s Photosmart D7460 is one of several models that combine photo printing with document printing. Targeted at families and small businesses that print their own photos, it is network-ready with wired and wireless connectivity options plus memory card slots for direct printing. The USB port on the front panel is PictBridge-enabled, which means you can print directly from compatible digital cameras.

HP Photosmart Pro B9180 Printer

8.8 Rating

A solidly-built A3+ printer that can produce excellent, long-lasting prints with consistent quality.HP’s Photosmart Pro B9180 photo printer is built like a truck: solid, heavy and somewhat clunky sounding at times. It’s 5.4 kg heavier than the Epson R2400 and 3.1 kg heavier than Canon’s Pixma Pro9000, both of which could be seen as competitors. A comparison of the three printers is provided at the end of this review. The B9180 is designed for HP’s new range of A3+ size photo papers and Digital Fine Art media and pigment-based Vivera inks, which produce waterproof prints when used with HP’s ‘Advanced’ photo papers.

HP Photosmart A626 Compact Photo Printer

8 Rating

An affordable snapshot printer with features and performance to suit families, cash-strapped scrapbookers and casual picture-takers.Positioned second in HP’s snapshot printer line-up, the Photosmart A626 is much more compact and portable than the top-of-the-range A826 Home Photo Centre. Weighing just over 1.5 kg, it has a pull-up carry handle and flip-down panels that act as input and output trays. Lowering the front panel reveals slots for CF, SD, xD and Memory Stick/Memory Stick Duo cards plus a USB port for connecting PictBridge-enabled cameras. The single, tri-colour ink cartridge fits behind a hatch on this panel as well.

FIRST LOOK: Epson Stylus Photo R3000

An A3+ pigment ink printer that produces superior output and is ideal for professional photographers and serious enthusiasts.Photo Review has been given a ‘first look’ at a pre-production unit of the new Stylus Photo R3000, which was announced in the US on 17 January. This model will sit above the Stylus Photo R2880 at the top of the company’s A3+ desktop line-up when it’s released in early March. Claimed as the most advanced model thus far, it features new AccuPhoto HD2 image technology for smoother colour transitions and better highlight and shadow detail.

Epson Stylus Pro 3880 Printer

8.8 Rating

An A2 desktop printer for photo enthusiasts and professional photographers who want to create long-lasting, exhibition-quality prints.Epson’s Stylus Pro 3880 was announced early in September as a replacement for the three-year-old Stylus Pro 3800 large format desktop printer (reviewed in December 2006). Compact and competitively priced, it is designed for professional photographers and serious photo enthusiasts who want to produce gallery-quality A2 size prints but could also suit photo studios, camera shops who offer custom printing and design studios.

Epson Stylus Pro 3800

9 Rating

An affordable high-performance, large format inkjet printer for serious enthusiasts and professional photographers.Designed to fill the gap between the high-end enthusiast and professional printer categories, Epson’s new Stylus Pro 3800 has the same print engine and ink set as Epson’s professional Stylus Pro 4800 and, like its more expensive ‘sister’ can print up to A2 size. Higher-capacity (80 ml) ink tanks distinguish the 3800 from A3+ desktop printers like the R2400 and R1800.

Epson Stylus Photo R2880

8 Rating

A sophisticated and well-built inkjet printer that delivers excellent print quality for photo enthusiasts and professional photographers.Epson’s Stylus Photo R2880, the long-awaited replacement for the popular R2400 model, boasts a new ink set and some technological advances that should please its target market. But, although it provides some welcome advances over its predecessor, the main flaw that frustrated owners of the R2400 has not been corrected. You still have to change black ink cartridges when you swap from printing on glossy media to matte papers.

Epson Stylus Photo R2000

7.5 Rating

A mid-range A3+ printer for photo enthusiasts who require WiFi connectivity. Replacing the Stylus Photo R1900 in Epson’s enthusiast’s printer range, the Stylus Photo R2000 uses the same UltraChrome Hi-Gloss 2 pigment ink set. However, each ink cartridge contains 17 ml of ink, compared with 11.4ml in the R1900. Like the R1900, this printer has been designed mainly for use with glossy and semi-gloss media but works equally well with the right kinds of matte papers.

Epson Stylus Photo R1900

8.5 Rating

A sturdy A3+ printer that will suit photographers who want long-lasting colour prints and are happy to use standard papers.Released almost three years after the Stylus Photo R1800 (which it replaces), Epson’s new Stylus Photo R1900 introduces a new UltraChrome Hi-Gloss2 ink set in which an orange ink replaces the blue ink. Epson claims this substitution results in better skin tones. The new model is slightly larger and marginally heavier than its predecessor and carries an Energy Star logo.