Even in a hurry, avoid Walgreens...
Dusty Sensiba
Registered Users Posts: 91 Big grins
I got in a hurry to get some prints to somebody locally and thought to myself:
"Self, maybe we can head over to Walgreens and see if they can get us some prints at this late hour. All the places I know and trust are closed. Hell, while I'm there waiting maybe I can cross the street and get Taco Bell, they're open too."
So I drove over with my pictures on an SD card (afraid they forgot that some people still use 'those old big cards').
First off even the SD reader was broken. Luckily I outsmarted them and had a backup plan...they used a notebook PCMCIA CF adapter to read my CF card. Because their CF slot doesn't fit my CF card.....wow.
So I order up my prints and go across the street.
When I come back I could't believe what I got.
1.All photos were oversharpened. I sharpen my photos in photoshop or Camera Raw. They did it again and tripled the effect. Some of the edges had wierd fringes. If only they could apply the same sharpness to their consciousness....they wouldn't be working at Walgreens.
2.All photos were oddly colored. I color correct, they color discorrect. They made it look like I don't know how to properly expose things. The highlights and shadows were all clipped and the greys were off.:huh
3.Crop and rotation. I had my photos cropped to a 2:3 ratio and the machine thought it needed to crop closer. It also didn't appreciate the way I didn't have the ground level in some of the photos so it 'fixed' that for me. I guess it's not OK to leave some lines in your images crooked for artistic effect anymore. My bad.:dunno
4.They have some filter that does odd things to skies. It detects the sky, darkens it severely and blurs it. I could see wierd streaks in the sky.:huh
I would say I got what I paid for but I can't say the prints I got were worth five bucks.
So I complained to the 'certified digital photo professional' at the lab (yes, her shirt said that) and she started telling me something about how the machine will not let you make a print too big if it thinks the resolution is too low:deal (and this has what to do with sharpening, cropping, rotating or color management?).:scratch
I guess if somebody wants prints they need to wait until tomorrow when I can get to a decent lab.
"Self, maybe we can head over to Walgreens and see if they can get us some prints at this late hour. All the places I know and trust are closed. Hell, while I'm there waiting maybe I can cross the street and get Taco Bell, they're open too."
So I drove over with my pictures on an SD card (afraid they forgot that some people still use 'those old big cards').
First off even the SD reader was broken. Luckily I outsmarted them and had a backup plan...they used a notebook PCMCIA CF adapter to read my CF card. Because their CF slot doesn't fit my CF card.....wow.
So I order up my prints and go across the street.
When I come back I could't believe what I got.
1.All photos were oversharpened. I sharpen my photos in photoshop or Camera Raw. They did it again and tripled the effect. Some of the edges had wierd fringes. If only they could apply the same sharpness to their consciousness....they wouldn't be working at Walgreens.
2.All photos were oddly colored. I color correct, they color discorrect. They made it look like I don't know how to properly expose things. The highlights and shadows were all clipped and the greys were off.:huh
3.Crop and rotation. I had my photos cropped to a 2:3 ratio and the machine thought it needed to crop closer. It also didn't appreciate the way I didn't have the ground level in some of the photos so it 'fixed' that for me. I guess it's not OK to leave some lines in your images crooked for artistic effect anymore. My bad.:dunno
4.They have some filter that does odd things to skies. It detects the sky, darkens it severely and blurs it. I could see wierd streaks in the sky.:huh
I would say I got what I paid for but I can't say the prints I got were worth five bucks.
So I complained to the 'certified digital photo professional' at the lab (yes, her shirt said that) and she started telling me something about how the machine will not let you make a print too big if it thinks the resolution is too low:deal (and this has what to do with sharpening, cropping, rotating or color management?).:scratch
I guess if somebody wants prints they need to wait until tomorrow when I can get to a decent lab.
0
Comments
One reason I love having my small and fiarly inexspensive Canon photo printer (not one of the 8 inks, an "old" 6 inker!!) I can print out a bunch of borderless 4x6 shots that look great in no time!
http://www.chrislaudermilkphoto.com/
And IMO it looks damn good doing it! LoL
I have the 510, but here is the 740.. all of $80.
Best of all, it is tiny: I toss it in my camera bag when I visit family...print out photos to hand to Grandma...always a big hit.
You know, that isn't a bad idea! I don't suppose any of these use the same BCI-6 ink tanks that the 950/960 series used do they?
They really produce outstanding shots and the ink/paper are in one package meaning you never run out of only one!
nope completely different. These are dye sub, the ink is a ribbon, and is literally 'melted' onto the paper (ok sublimated for all you chem majors). In any case, you can not buy the paper and ink separately, it comes in a kit...the ribbon prints 15? or so prints, then you toss and pull out another.
Lots of good reviews: Steves Digicam (photo credit above) and photo.net
I never considered something like this since I have my IP6000D, but I never thought about it in the context of taking it with me and printing stuff out for people on the spot.
The end result is a very nice looking picture that is very durable. I tried to bust up a few pictures that didn't turn out the way I liked and it was really hard to mess them up.
I can't speak for the Canon, but I'm sure it's along the same line.
Bottom line: they are great little tools to have, your limited by size, but that's not a big issue since I buy larger prints through SM anyway. It's even really good for my wife who scrapbooks. She just types in keywords into lightroom and sends the shots to the printer dock. Done.
Sounds like you just had some bad luck! I'm a manager for Walgreens so I probably have a bias opinion but I happen to think for the most part, the labs do a really good job. We have a digital Fuji lab which does an incredible job of printing. The paper is exposed with a laser and then developed through the typical chemistry. There are no filters that automatically change the apperance of the image, it must be done by the customer on the kiosk or manually by the tech. As far as sizing goes, if you do not crop for the correct proportion you are just playing craps as how the computer will proportion the image for you (ie 4x6 proportions much different than 8x10). Now if you experienced a Kodak lab at Walgreens I see where you might have run into some strange issues as the machines are very dated/obsolete. Either way I'm sorry to hear you had a bad experience with your local Walgreens, but I wouldn't say that holds true for all 6000 stores.
Scan Cafe: let the pros do it