Cool Tools
Login  |  Register

Pictopia

This is a very convenient way to produce large-scale hi-fi color prints from digital images. You email them a digital image file; in a few days they mail back a magnificently large, utterly crisp, remarkably stable, frameable print.

There are a number of web-based photofinishers, but these guys specialize in ultra-large-scale prints. By large-scale I mean a photo up to 4 feet by 10 feet - if you have a wall that big! Or any size smaller, say 2 feet by 3 feet. The display-quality prints are made using Fuji archive paper, and Pictopia's up-res software. The archive paper gives a photo-chemical image stable for 75 years, which is hard to do with ink jets now; the up-res software ingeniously fills in the pixel gaps that would ordinarily occur when you enlarge an image beyond the resolution it contains. For supreme accuracy this outfit use a military-grade helical laser printer, designed to print satellite images without moving the paper. The print quality is superb corner to corner, which is not true in almost any other method of printing except ink-jet. (Of course, not every image can survive such magnification.)

Compared to other processes for making large images, their prices are cheap. For instance, a hefty 16 x 20 inch print is $25, while an impressive 2 foot by 3 foot print is $65, and a maniacal 4 foot by 8 foot print is $370. Couple that with their handy online ordering process, speedy delivery, it's a deal. I am currently using this service to fulfill customer orders for Asia Grace images from my website, and I've been very happy so far.

You can of course send Pictopia other kinds of non-photographic files, like maps, charts, or computer renderings. For big pictures, per square foot, this is the way to go.

-- KK

Available from Pictopia

 







Comments

 
#1 | Sun, 05-17-09 08:01
Eli

If you're just wanting a pic up to 24 by 36 inches in size, adoramapix.com is much cheaper and the quality is excellent. Their metallic prints are my favorite. For anything larger than that though I'd certainly consider pictopia, as adorama doesn't seem to print anything over 2 by 3 feet.

 

Leave a comment



Thanks for your comment. The words in the CAPTCHA box come from old book texts that are being scanned and stored by the Internet Archive. By entering the words in the box, you prove you are not a bot and also you help proofread the books. If the sample you see is too hard to read, simply click the recycle button to get another two. Don't forget to put a space between the words.