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Mar 26, 2019 23:45:18   #
jeep_daddy Loc: Prescott AZ
 
Strucar2 wrote:
I do have questions. 1. I can’t find 11x14 size in the drop down menus. 2. I am using red river paper and have downloaded the icc profile for it but can’t find it in psp when I print.


Just create a new paper size in PSP. It's easy.

The large circle is the button where you can make a custom size paper to print and the small circle is how you can stretch the image to print borderless is you want.


(Download)

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Mar 29, 2019 14:24:57   #
JaiGieEse Loc: Foxworth, MS
 
clickety wrote:
Interesting but,

The Op has Canon
The op asked about Canon
The post is about Canon


I've been acting under the impression that UH is a place to share one's experiences.

Now, had you more carefully read my post, you'd have noted that I described my own printing experiences - with LR, PSP and ID, in hopes that they might be of some use to the OP. Please do note that my printing procedures were not about Canon, but about which approach yields the better results - which is just what I commented on.

Sorry my words offended you, but you need not feel that I care a whit about your assumed offense - or your choice of hardware. To quote an old country song - "Here's a quarter. Go call somebody who cares."

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Mar 30, 2019 09:10:16   #
Gene51 Loc: Yonkers, NY, now in LSD (LowerSlowerDelaware)
 
Strucar2 wrote:
I have a pixma pro 100. Here is my question. What’s the best way to go at it, through LR print mod, Photoshop print or using print studio pro ? Plus I have 11x14 inch paper and I can’t find a setting for that size in any of the print modules.


In my opinion the best way to print is to use a Raster Image Processor - or RIP - to handle everything for you. Being able to create custom print sizes and/or print multiple images on a sheet is a big benefit, it also does an amazing job on antialiasing, adjusting head and paper feed step increments for specific printers, broader dynamic range, and top shelf output sharpening and noise abatement. The problem is cost - software-only RIPs are going to cost you more than you paid for the printer, and hardware/software combinations are even more costly.

However, if you are looking for near-RIP results, I can recommend without hesitation Qimage software. Technically it is not a RIP, but it has much of the benefit of one. I've been using Qimage for 12 yrs. It costs $70, then an annual update fee of $20 to stay current. It's worth your consideration.

I learned about this after experiencing frustration trying to get the simplest of tasks done in all of the applications I was using at the time to edit my images. None were giving me satisfactory results or a satisfactory process to get to the results.

http://www.ddisoftware.com/qimage-u/index.html

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