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What is it: Overdue update in the 13-inch dye-based series of Stylus Photo inkjets
What we think: Good looks and excellent quality colour prints makes up for less than perfect black and white output
Epson Stylus Photo 1400 Review
Reviewed on: 6 February 2007
It's been a long six years since Epson last updated the 13-inch dye-based model in its popular Stylus Photo line of photo printers.
Epson's Stylus Photo 1400, on the market for around £260, can spray out ink drops as small as 1.5 picolitres, compared to its predecessor, the 1280's minimum 4-picolitre drop size. Plus, the 1400 uses six separate ink cartridges, while the 1280 bunched all but its black ink into one cartridge. That means the 1400 won't make you waste the rest of your unused colour ink just because the light magenta ran out again.
Speaking of ink, most of the 13-inch Stylus Photo line uses pigment-based inks, which typically last longer than dye-based inks. However, Epson says that the dye-based Claria Hi-Definition inks used by the 1400 are rated to last as long as 98 years behind glass and even longer in dark storage. According to Wilhem Imaging Research, the 1280 can only claim a print permanence for 26 years when displayed behind glass. Not only that, if you've used the 1280 in the past, you should notice that the 1400 prints faster, thanks to its newer DX5 MicroPiezo print head.
Scrapbookers, who often use 12x12-inch paper, will probably welcome the 1400, since it lists for around £100 less than the Stylus Photo R1800, which is the next step up in Epson's 13-inch line. However, photographers looking for more neutral black and white prints should take a look at Epson's Stylus Photo R2400.
Design
Printers used to be massive, ugly, heavy behemoths clad in industrial-looking tan plastic. Colour wasn't an option and the dot-matrix print engine sounded as if it was etching your words into a wood plaque instead of churning out a book report. Thankfully, that has changed. Sleek silver and black styling keeps the Stylus Photo 1400 from becoming an eyesore in your home office.
Fans of PictBridge printing, which lets you print directly from your camera by connecting it to the printer via USB, will appreciate the convenience of the 1400's front-panel USB jack. But unlike some of its competitors, this Epson doesn't include a card reader, so you can't print directly from a memory card. Epson probably thinks the market for this printer is too advanced for that feature, but it does come in handy from time to time. Epson does include the ability to print onto CDs and DVDs, both full sized and their smaller 8cm cousins used in camcorders. Just be sure you get the ones with the special white surface on top.
As usual with the Stylus Photo line, the inks load from the top. In this case, that means six ink cartridges: cyan, magenta, yellow, black, light cyan and light magenta. Like most home printers, paper loads from the top of the back and emerges, after printing, onto the tray that extends from the front of the unit. The input tray can hold as many as 120 sheets of plain paper or up to 20 sheets of Epson photo paper, depending on paper size and type. Epson says the printer can accept media up to 0.11mm thick in sizes ranging from 6x4 to 44x13 inches. There's no roll feed option though, so you'll have to find fulfillment with cut-sheet media.
The driver is the same one Epson includes on its other Stylus Photo printers, though it doesn't include the fancy black and white driver that comes with the R2400. Our only problem with the driver is that it's slightly counterintuitive to disable the printer's colour management, which should be done if you want to let Photoshop, or another colour-managed program, handle colour conversion.
First you have to proceed past the default view to the advanced view, then you have to click the ICM radio button before you even see the option of turning the printer's colour management off. To its credit, the printer generally does a nice job of colour conversion, but if you plan on using third-party paper with custom ICC profiles, the process isn't as easy as it could be. At least Epson makes it easy to set the advanced view as your own default if you prefer.
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