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One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

The saturation function makes miracles, because paper prints tend to fade colors vs what you see on the screen. I would boost saturation to unreal high, but on paper it will looklooks just right.

One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

The saturation function makes miracles, because paper prints tend to fade colors vs what you see on the screen. I would boost saturation to unreal high, but on paper it will look just right.

One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

The saturation function makes miracles, because paper prints tend to fade colors vs what you see on the screen. I would boost saturation to unreal high, but on paper it looks just right.

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One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

The saturation function makes miracles, because paper prints tend to fade colors vs what you see on the screen. I would boost saturation to unreal high, but on paper it will look just right.

One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.

The saturation function makes miracles, because paper prints tend to fade colors vs what you see on the screen. I would boost saturation to unreal high, but on paper it will look just right.

Source Link

One easy step to save on ink and quality is to print different small-size versions of the same photo adjusted in Photoshop (levels, saturation, etc) and then picking visually the best. Then print this "perfect" version full size.