Recommend me a printing company.....but not Peak
Posted: Wed Nov 04, 2009 10:03 pm Etc/GMT-1+01:00
Hello all
I could use some recommendations of printing firms to use for photographic prints from digital files. Bit of background if you'll indulge me:
I've used Peak Imaging for a few years now and always got results I was fairly happy with so I stuck with them (plus they're a local firm). I'm never one to sit there nitpicking how closely the print colour matches to my monitor, I know you can only get so close realistically and if it looks OK then that's good enough for me.
But recently I had a reasonably big (16x12") print done which straight out of the box just looked way too magenta. Even my wife commented on it - the shot had a very strong post-sunset blue shade to it which obviously shows any magenta cast in printing up pretty strongly. So I went back and made sure my monitor was calibrated properly again, which is was, made sure I was sending the file to them in sRGB, which I was etc etc, double checked with the wife incase my eyes are going west etc etc. Still no joy, everything looked right to me.
So next I send off for their calibration print and download their calibration file. Print arrives in the post - viewing it under a daylight source its a remarkably close match to what I see on screen - great, but it doesn't explain why the big print is way out. I phoned them up a couple of times to discuss this and check they're not "optimising" the image on the sly or anything like that. They suggest the exact shade I'm printing might be one that just out of the paper's gamut and so send my an icc profile specifically for their gloss paper and I use this to soft-proof the image in photoshop and get a test print done - its still nowhere near. I don't even think its specific to the shade of blues in the image as other prints I had done at the same time all show a slight magenta cast although its not as objectionable in the other images.
Now all this is academic really since I don't want this to get into a discussion of the subtleties of colour magagement, but the long and short of it is I'm losing the will to live here since I can't get any kind of consistency out of them. Anecdotally I've got friends who's also had similar issues with them over the last couple of years - the theory being it started to go downhill when they ditched the Fuji printer and did everything on the durst. I can't fault their service or willingness to help but I'm now at the stage where I'm going to have to move on to another printers as I'm at a dead end. Hence this thread.
So other options I know of are metro, bdp and photobox. I've used metro before for E6 processing but ditched them after they mess up a couple of rolls. Used photobox for calendars and snapshot/family type prints and been OK although they don't print bigger than 15x10". Never used BDP but I know cornish etc use them for cibachrome. Any more suggestions? Anyone else had similar issues with Peak printing or is it just me and my aquaintances? All i want is a decent consistent output at a reasonable cost, and preferably someone who'll furnish you with a profile to soft proof or at least a calibration print to get you into the same ballpark.
(I have considered just sending the slide to BDP for a cibachrome print, but I have heard their output can be inconsistent too - hence why Cornish gets all his prints done in limited batches - anyone used them?)
Thanks in advance!
I could use some recommendations of printing firms to use for photographic prints from digital files. Bit of background if you'll indulge me:
I've used Peak Imaging for a few years now and always got results I was fairly happy with so I stuck with them (plus they're a local firm). I'm never one to sit there nitpicking how closely the print colour matches to my monitor, I know you can only get so close realistically and if it looks OK then that's good enough for me.
But recently I had a reasonably big (16x12") print done which straight out of the box just looked way too magenta. Even my wife commented on it - the shot had a very strong post-sunset blue shade to it which obviously shows any magenta cast in printing up pretty strongly. So I went back and made sure my monitor was calibrated properly again, which is was, made sure I was sending the file to them in sRGB, which I was etc etc, double checked with the wife incase my eyes are going west etc etc. Still no joy, everything looked right to me.
So next I send off for their calibration print and download their calibration file. Print arrives in the post - viewing it under a daylight source its a remarkably close match to what I see on screen - great, but it doesn't explain why the big print is way out. I phoned them up a couple of times to discuss this and check they're not "optimising" the image on the sly or anything like that. They suggest the exact shade I'm printing might be one that just out of the paper's gamut and so send my an icc profile specifically for their gloss paper and I use this to soft-proof the image in photoshop and get a test print done - its still nowhere near. I don't even think its specific to the shade of blues in the image as other prints I had done at the same time all show a slight magenta cast although its not as objectionable in the other images.
Now all this is academic really since I don't want this to get into a discussion of the subtleties of colour magagement, but the long and short of it is I'm losing the will to live here since I can't get any kind of consistency out of them. Anecdotally I've got friends who's also had similar issues with them over the last couple of years - the theory being it started to go downhill when they ditched the Fuji printer and did everything on the durst. I can't fault their service or willingness to help but I'm now at the stage where I'm going to have to move on to another printers as I'm at a dead end. Hence this thread.
So other options I know of are metro, bdp and photobox. I've used metro before for E6 processing but ditched them after they mess up a couple of rolls. Used photobox for calendars and snapshot/family type prints and been OK although they don't print bigger than 15x10". Never used BDP but I know cornish etc use them for cibachrome. Any more suggestions? Anyone else had similar issues with Peak printing or is it just me and my aquaintances? All i want is a decent consistent output at a reasonable cost, and preferably someone who'll furnish you with a profile to soft proof or at least a calibration print to get you into the same ballpark.
(I have considered just sending the slide to BDP for a cibachrome print, but I have heard their output can be inconsistent too - hence why Cornish gets all his prints done in limited batches - anyone used them?)
Thanks in advance!