02-14-2024 02:08 PM - last edited on 02-14-2024 10:26 PM by Tiffany
I am getting very dull looking prints when I print color photos on my Pixma Pro-200. The cardstock I have is International Paper's 16 pt Cover Smooth 120 lb Accent Opaque cardstock. It gave me perfectly acceptable results with my iP4700. My research suggests that having switched from a pigment to a dye ink printer may be the source of my poor results.
1) I would like some recommendations for a similar weight cardstock that will give me clean, color-balanced prints with the Pro-200.
2) Is it possible that if I use proper ICC color printer profile I might get results as acceptable as I got with the iP4700.
thanks
baum grenze
02-14-2024 08:54 PM
The card stock you have is an uncoated paper designed for offset printing, and will give good color with laser printer toner too. But it will absorb too much liquid inkjet ink to give brilliant colors.
For an inkjet printer, you want an inkjet-intended paper, which has a coating that makes ink stay on the surface.
Here are Canon's offerings. They give their thicknesses.
https://www.usa.canon.com/shop/ink-toner/paper/photo-paper
02-14-2024 10:22 PM
I tried finding cardstock that works with dye ink in the link you provided. It seems to be all about photo printing paper.
thanks
baumgrenze
02-15-2024 07:50 PM
The inks used on an inkjet ARE dye inks. Photos are printed with dye inks. Photo printing inkjet papers are printed on with dye inks. If they were opaque pigment inks you would not get mixing of colors.
I don't understand what else you want.
02-15-2024 09:27 PM
@normadel wrote:The inks used on an inkjet ARE dye inks. Photos are printed with dye inks. Photo printing inkjet papers are printed on with dye inks. If they were opaque pigment inks you would not get mixing of colors.
I don't understand what else you want.
Inkjet printers can be dye ink or pigment ink. All the high end Canon printers above the PRO-100 and PRO-200 are pigment inks.
02-15-2024 07:22 AM
@baumgrenze_322 wrote:I am getting very dull looking prints when I print color photos on my Pixma Pro-200. The cardstock I have is International Paper's 16 pt Cover Smooth 120 lb Accent Opaque cardstock. It gave me perfectly acceptable results with my iP4700. My research suggests that having switched from a pigment to a dye ink printer may be the source of my poor results.
1) I would like some recommendations for a similar weight cardstock that will give me clean, color-balanced prints with the Pro-200.
2) Is it possible that if I use proper ICC color printer profile I might get results as acceptable as I got with the iP4700.
thanks
baum grenze
You are on target with respect to results from pigment vs dye ink.
ICC profiles control color, so if you had a custom ICC profile created for that printer/media combination you would get better results, but the profile won't correct for the ink absorption.
Maybe something like this: neenah-bright-white-catalog.ashx (neenahpaper.com)
02-24-2024 04:07 PM
I checked with Neenah. They make no coated cardstock.
Thanks for trying.
baum grenze
02-24-2024 04:14 PM
Maybe try posting here:
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