RalphLambrecht
Subscriber
my Epson printer driver offers different resolutions for inkjet printing. Does it make a difference when printing photographs or is there a preferred resolution?

Larry, this information has been disproven and its been directly contradicted by Epson. There is no need to do anything with multiple of 300, 360, 363, or anything else. There was just a thread about this on another forum and Andrew Rodney made this same statement...
I would suggest that anyone that wants to see this for themselves can size up an image to 40 or 60 inches, then crop to an 8x10 portion of it, print it, then size it down to a multiple of 360 and do it again. Then you can see for yourself if there is any difference.
I don't think there will be.
Lenny
I think what ralph was asking had more to do with the output resolution from the printer 720, 1440, 2880, and not the input resolution of the file. The print head only has 1440 actual nozzles per channel per inch, and, from my understanding, the 2880 resolution in the horizontal direction is achieved by the movement of the print head as it moves across the paper (you'll notice that it is 2880x1440).
Some papers might not be able to hold the actual dots when printed at the maximum resolution, and some dots might even end up in the "wrong" place on the paper, or overlap with other dots. In actuality, not all of the nozzles are firing for any given image pixel. The tone/color for a given image pixel, when printed, is a combination of multiple inks, dot sizes, the spacing of dots based on dithering algorithms, and overlaps with other inks. There are a whole lot of internal calculations that have nothing to do with the number of pixels coming into the driver.
With all that being said, I still want the printer to spit out as many dots as I can get. That is why I think digital black and white prints made with Cone inks are better than those made with UC k3 inks. There are more dots of more dilutions of grey, and therefore less visible dithering. Those prints look smoother. That might not be everyones criteria for "better" but it is certainly a part of the equation for me.
As for what resolution the input file should be: I don't know what the epson driver does when interpolating input resolution to something that it can then turn into dots on the paper. Based on what Roy Herrington has said about how QTR handles input resolution, in that all files are converted to 720x720 dots per inch, you have to assume that epson does something similar.
This is a quote from him from the QTR yahoo group:
"QTR resamples all input files to 720x720 pixels. Then dithering is done to whatever dpi you've selected -- mostly 2880x1440 or 1440x720. A couple printers also have 1440x1440.
"The resampling to 720x720 is done by the OS on the Mac so I'm not sure of the algorithm. On the PC it's a bi-linear algorithm -- basically two linear interpolations -- horizontal then vertical. As far as I know all the Epson drivers do either 360x360 or
720x720 resampling. In general the smaller printers tend to do 720x720 and the larger ones do 360x360. If the driver has a Finest Detail switch that gives the user a choice between these resamplings."
Most of the printing I do is from drum scans of 8x10 negatives—some of that is now done from 6000x4000 pixel digital capture— but in both cases, my personal preference is to keep the "master" file with layers at the original resolution, and then an additional flattened and sharpened version at the original resolution. Then, if I am making a much smaller print (8x10-16x20), I down-sample the image to the desired print size at 720ppi in photoshop (bicubic smoother) and then do some additional sharpening to compensate for any softening that may have happened in the interpolation. When the interpolation is going to be that extreme I would rather have some control over the process. If I am making a much larger print (24x30 and up) I will generally just print at whatever the resolution the file actually is and let the driver do the rest—although I tend to never need (nor want) to make a print where the resolution falls below 360-300 ppi. In most cases I'll let the 360 dpi determine the max print size and let it go.
I assume that higher-end RIPs like Studio Print or RIPs for image setters and film recorders have a much better way of handling that interpolation/dithering/profile conversion process (although I don't know anything about how they actually do it). For those RIPs I would just hand over the file to the application, define the output size, and let it do it's job.
Lenny made a point I wish more people would take to heart. Those print size/required PPI charts are completely worthless and don't take into consideration how people act and how the print actually looks. I'd like to meet a single photographer who does not put their nose up to the print—I'd also like to see someone try to keep you back at the "proper viewing distance" at an actual exhibition. Sure, a billboard can be printed at 25ppi, because you are 300 feet away and are moving at 60mph, but that is not how you look at art. If your file doesn't have enough information to print at larger sizes and retain detail then don't print larger (unless you don't care how your work actually looks). I would much rather see a good small print than a large bad one.
Richard, I'm sure Mr. Cone appreciates your free advertisement but, I just can't see how switching inks can change printer resolution.
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