you may need to calibrate your monitor. There are programs you can use to do this. I'm assuming that you are printing at home? If not, and you are getting them printed at a printing place, you can ask them to re-print and adjust the colors until they look correct to you--or try a different place till you find one that prints true. Our local shop doesn't print colors accurately, so I have to take mine to the next town. But my HP 7410 prints excellent colors at home, so I am happy.
2006-09-19 03:55:08
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answer #1
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answered by poppet 6
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If it's a question of contrast and colour balance - maybe not.
You can try printing a few plain photos and adjusting your monitor to match how the picture came out - brightness, hue, contrast, etc. Also adjust display properties in Windows Control panel. However, I find that even the difference between my laptop (LCD) screen and the attached monitor is very different. The LCD is brighter. Print some other photos after adjusting and see if they match now...
The other problem may be that the photo finisher applies averaging to the pictures to try to "improve" them, in case they're too dark, too red, etc. Sort of like the "auto-adjust" on your photo-edit software... The results may not be what you wanted. look to see if your chosen finisher claims to do any adjustment. Ask the attendants.
This is where printing on your own printer makes things easier. You know there are no other adjustments being applied.
2006-09-19 03:59:25
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answer #2
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answered by Anon 7
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Photo quality you see on screen can be deceptive. A small resolution picture on the computer may look very good but on the printer it may be bad.
To ensure that you get better quality is to have a high resolution photo, which is usally in size range of 1 to 2 mb. A good printer which can do a photo quality print
2006-09-19 03:55:45
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answer #3
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answered by Tarak 2
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Hi, the thing is, it depends on the printer's quality. If u r using a high end printer, the photos might print better than it looked on screen and printer's resolution also comes into picture considering picture's quality
2006-09-19 03:50:55
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answer #4
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answered by ajay s 1
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It's all a question of Dots Per Inch or dpi. Most pictures on the web are only 72 dpi, most professional printing is done at 300 dpi. It is possible to reduce a 300 dpi picture down to 72 dpi, but you cannot do the reverse. If your pics are at 72 dpi they will look all jagged when you print them, there is no way around this.
2006-09-19 03:50:44
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answer #5
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answered by spanier88 2
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video show gadgets variety plenty whilst showing colorings. there are approaches to alter your show screen to instruct precise shade and brightness, even though it demands utilizing a mild and shade sensor that measures the easily values of the liquid crystal show image, and word shade correction to t
2016-12-18 13:01:44
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answer #6
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answered by ussery 4
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