The smallest wide-format printer on the market, it can print up to D size (24 inches wide) using both rolls or sheets of paper. After all, the T120 was designed for architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) freelancers and students.
Speaking of professional printers, you don’t get much more professional than the HP DesignJet T120 ePrinter. HP Designjet T120 ePrinter – for AEC professionals who don’t want to break the bank If you buy the economy pack of paper and dye roll, you will spend about 22p per photo with this printer.Īll in all, it’s a great budget option for people who just need nice photos, without all the extra cost and space of a professional printer. The photo quality is great for such a little machine, easily matching the quality you’d get in high street shops, and they don’t cost much per photo, either. That means no smudging, even right after you print the image. It costs around £76, making it the most affordable photo printer in this list. One of Canon’s thermal-dye dedicated photo printers, it uses heat to transfer dye to the page and then coats the dye with an overcoat to protect the image. The Canon Selphy CP910 Wireless Compact Photo Printer is ideal for anyone who needs a dedicated photo printer that they can take on the go with them, without breaking the bank. Canon Selphy CP910 Wireless Compact Photo Printer – for great images on a tiny budget These are the top 3 photo printers of 2016 – so far. Luckily, manufacturers are more than rising to the challenge. People are printing everything from photo albums to professional photographs and photo cake decorations on edible paper, and it’s leading to a demand in high-quality, space-saving home and office printers that can handle everything the modern photo lover can throw at it. In 2012, market analysts at InfoTrends conducted a survey of EU households with internet connections, and they found photo printing had increased 11% in the previous five years. After all, who needs a clunky printer taking up precious desk space and spitting out blurry images that smudge if you so much as look at the ink the wrong way?Īctually, it seems we’re printing more photos than we used to. In this age of Instagram and online photo printing services, photo printers can seem to be confined to a distant past with the daguerreotype and the camera obscura.