To get the best print quality, use Brother paper Product Description Brother BP 61GLP ... more
Premium Glossy Photo Paper - glossy photo paper - 20 sheet(s) Media Type Glossy photo paper Media Size 102 x 152 mm Printing Technology Ink-jet Media Weight 190 ...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
To get the best print quality, use Brother paper Product Description Brother BP 61GLP ... more
Premium Glossy Photo Paper - glossy photo paper - 20 sheet(s) Media Type Glossy photo paper Media Size 102 x 152 mm Printing Technology Ink-jet Media Weight 190 ...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Brother is committed to providing exceptional value for customers by utilizing its ... more
accumulated technology and know-how to satisfy their needs. The company supplies unique products, for personal use in office and home that incorporate the pleasure of cr...
Postage & Packaging: Free! Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days...
Brother is committed to providing exceptional value for customers by utilizing its ... more
accumulated technology and know-how to satisfy their needs. The company supplies unique products, for personal use in office and home that incorporate the pleasure of
Postage & Packaging:see site for shipping costs Availability:3-7 days
Brother is committed to providing exceptional value for customers by utilizing its ... more
accumulated technology and know-how to satisfy their needs. The company supplies unique products, for personal use in office and home that incorporate the pleasure of
Postage & Packaging:see site for shipping costs Availability:3-7 days
Last week, I was asked to journey to my local Office World to buy paper for some holiday snaps. After some shelve browsing I came across the Hewlett Packard Premiumphotopaper.
I bought it purely due to the fact the packaging seemed to reach out, and in one swift promotional swing, forced me to purchase the product. Well okay I'm exaggurating, the main thing which attracted me to the product was the price tag. Office World have always been pretty good on prices, and the 6.79 I paid for a 10 sheet A4 pack of this left me feeling most impressed, infact I picked up two packs worth to cover all the pictures!
The paper's appearance is of particular high quality. Its extremely glossy, and resembles the sort of paper you find on the covers of magazines, yet much thicker. Of course, I was highly skeptical of the results when used in ...
Advantages: Good quality paper produces a shop quality print Disadvantages: Tear off side can be a bit ragged
This product is premium quality photopaper with each sheet weighing 240 g/m² (which is quite heavy). It is pre-cut on three sides like normal paper but with a perforated tear-off tab down the fourth side so you can handle the print without touching the photo itself. It aims to give you a finished product that looks like a traditional glossy photograph and claims to be optimised print quality and reliability with HP inkjet printers.
"What the manufacturer says about this product: (taken from their web site)":
The HP PremiumPhotoPaper is designed especially for home users who want the look and feel of traditional photographs when producing reprints, enlargements or photos for sharing as well as business users for whom high quality, high impact outputs are vital. The traditional-quality 240 g/m2 weight gives your digital photos ...
Advantages: The quality is excellent - looks just like "proper" photos Disadvantages: You may have to fiddle with photos before printing to get it to fit!
paper in all good computer/stationery stores - online or on the High Street. I seem to see it everywhere I go. Ciao has some links too if you can't find it.
(Try http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000CG1PD/qid=1093475070/sr=2-1/ref=sr211/202-4971733-2357466 if you have problems - sorry about the long address!)
Quick comparison:
I recently shared some photos I took on a holiday in Russia with a friend, who wanted to print out some copies. I went round to her house and we set up her printer, but the paper she bought was Kodak GlossyPhotoPaper or a similar name (sorry - can't remember the exact name!) Her printer was pretty similar to mine. Comparing the same photos, one thing I did notice was that the Kodak photos didn't look as much like the photos I used to get from Boots as my Epson photos did. Normally I would ...