ricoh 2110
Re: ricoh 2110
so i converted ricoh 2110 to sublimation but very disappointed i can either get good graphics or good photos but not at the same time anybody got any ideas as to what settings i need to tweak. or should i give it up as a loss and get an epson
- webtrekker
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Re: ricoh 2110
Hi bels. Can you give some more information?
- Ink brand.
- Paper brand.
- Software used for printing.
- Whether you have the correct ICC profile for your ink and paper.
- What you are sublimating: metal, ceramics, clothing, etc.
Re: ricoh 2110
hi the inks I use are ink express supplied by a local firm which is why i purchased them I have contacted them countless times for a icc profile and all I get is sorry we will get it to you straight away but it never arrives
my paper is text print xp which I have used in the past on my other machines with excellent results
I predominately print on ceramic but I do other materials aswell
I use photoshop cc for design and printing it does have print setting for ricoh but I get the same results as if I use printer settings the result are my graphics are excellent crisp and vibrant but when I include a photo in the design the people look like the have a bad spray tan if I adjust the settings in the printer I can get a reasonable photo but the background is dull. I have an Epson workforce printer and the same design comes out great using basic printer settings.
I got this printer because I do a lot of fairs and markets where I need a small footprint so my Epson is just to big
so now I cant decide whether to just go and get a ricoh 3110 with sawgrass inks which I know work as ive used them before but want to get away from the whole sawgrass monopoly on inks and prices
thanks bels
my paper is text print xp which I have used in the past on my other machines with excellent results
I predominately print on ceramic but I do other materials aswell
I use photoshop cc for design and printing it does have print setting for ricoh but I get the same results as if I use printer settings the result are my graphics are excellent crisp and vibrant but when I include a photo in the design the people look like the have a bad spray tan if I adjust the settings in the printer I can get a reasonable photo but the background is dull. I have an Epson workforce printer and the same design comes out great using basic printer settings.
I got this printer because I do a lot of fairs and markets where I need a small footprint so my Epson is just to big
so now I cant decide whether to just go and get a ricoh 3110 with sawgrass inks which I know work as ive used them before but want to get away from the whole sawgrass monopoly on inks and prices
thanks bels
webtrekker;116641 wrote:Hi bels. Can you give some more information?
Thanks.
- Ink brand.
- Paper brand.
- Software used for printing.
- Whether you have the correct ICC profile for your ink and paper.
- What you are sublimating: metal, ceramics, clothing, etc.
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