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Large format photo printers (39 items found) Best Match Price, Low to High Price, High to Low Name, A-Z Name, Z-A Top Rating New Arrivals SORT BY.
The i8720 from Canon’s Pixma line is set up to print completely borderless media, which allows you to produce studio quality prints of all your photo projects. It’s no surprise that a company like Canon has put this feature front and center. Of course, you can print media at up to 13 x 9 inches, which gives you true flexibility for printing fliers and large format jobs. On top of the that, the resolution is virtually unparalleled, with 600 x 600 ppi for black and white photos and 9600 x 2400 for color, which adds to the premium output.
The functionality itself is truly seamless, too, with Canon’s AirPrint app for easy connection to your phone, tablet or other mobile devices. It’s a great feature because you don’t have to get yourself bogged down with the usual driver installation and “how do I get this to print?” shuffle of old-style units. You can also control it using the three-inch LCD screen right onboard. It all comes in a sleek black little unit and will look great in your home photo studio.
Also from Brother’s MFCJ line, the 6935 is an all-in-one, so it doesn’t give you the same ridiculously sharp, premium print qualities as some photo-focused units, but you can work with media up to 11 x 17. There’s a 50-sheet capacity that also lets you print double-sided jobs, and you can print envelopes and cardstock. The speeds are super fast, too, at 20 ppm and 22 ppm for color and black and white, respectively. Brother claims that with the ink efficiency, you’ll spend less than one cent for each page (which is good, because of how fast those pages come flying out). It’s all also powered by Amazon’s Auto Replenishment, which automatically places an order for new ink when it’s needed, via the Wi-Fi connection.
HP OfficeJets are the staples of the home (or college) office, so it’s no surprise that this one found it’s way to the first spot on our list of large format devices. It can print pages up to 11 x 17 (the standard tabloid size), and it does so with the tried-and-true HP OfficeJet capabilities of smaller format devices. But it doesn’t stop at printing, this all-in-one can handling print jobs, copying, faxing, and scanning. It has wireless connectivity, lets you print two-sided jobs, and even comes seamlessly connected through HP’s most powerful printing app ever (which lets you scan and print directly from your smartphone using your camera).
It’ll print at lightning fast speeds giving you 22 pages per minute for black and white jobs and 18 pages per minute for color documents. They’ve engineered a unique ink-saving tech that promises to save you up to 50 percent on ink by using the existing cartridges more efficiently. There’s a 2.65-inch touchscreen for controlling the printer on the device itself, and it’s compatible with HP’s impressive high yield ink cartridges. You can even print straight-to-the-edge borderless projects such as brochures and fliers, so those large format jobs are extra stunning and don’t seem home-printed at all.
In terms of affordability, Brother is a brand that you really can’t beat in the printer game. The MFCJ6930 is the latest in a long line of all-in-ones that offer wide-format print jobs up to 11 x 17-inch pages. There’s a 50-sheet feeding tray for printing front-and-back full copies, which would be great for packets. The scanner glass is ledger-sized, so you can carry that large format to the scanner-copier function, too.
There’s a 3.7-inch color display that lets you print directly from certain services such as Dropbox and Google Drive (along with expandable cloud apps directly from Brother). The printer is compatible with super high yield ink cartridges, which is great because there is a 500-sheet dual tray, so you can print a job of any size without capacity slowing you down.
And those massive jobs won’t take you forever, either, because there is a 20/22 ppm speed (for color and black and white, respectively), which is equally impressive to basically all other printers out on the market right now. It all connects via wireless or ethernet, so you won’t have any trouble seamlessly sending jobs to the device. Round that out with a pretty slim footprint, and the device itself will fit great in your home office.
Bringing print shop-quality right into the home or office and backed by a strong name, the Epson WorkForce WF-7720 is well suited for high volume and wide format printing. Utilizing 80-percent less power than traditional color printers, the WF-7720 handles document sizes up to 11.7 x 17 inches or borderless prints up to 13 x 19 inches. The 500-sheet tray holds enough paper to last through a full workday with a 125-sheet output tray catching documents on their way out.
The 35-page auto document feeder allows you to walk away during prints and the rear of the WF-7720 adds an additional feed tray for specialty paper sizes like legal prints. The 4.3-inch color touchscreen makes navigating the print menu easy along with quickly assisting in setting up both wired and wireless networking featuring Wi-Fi, Wi-Fi Direct, Airprint or NFC technology. Standard features like two-sided print, copy, scan and fax are all among the default options while Amazon adds Dash replenishment for tracking ink usage and automatically ordering more ink when supplies are low.
The Canon TS9521C Wireless Crafting Printer is an all-in-one printer engineered specifically for creative projects. When it comes to color-prints, this model truly gets a chance to shine; it produces stunning photos and preserves their vibrant color with Canon’s ChromaLife100 ink. Additionally, the printer comes preprogrammed with 40 patterned backgrounds, perfect for scrapbooking and other artistic endeavors. The TS9521C supports a variety of paper sizes, from 3.5 x 3.5 inches to 12 x 12 inches, and also offers borderless printing. This wide-format, all-in-one printer is remarkably versatile, ready to take on an array of different projects, including booklets, pamphlets, greeting cards, photo collages, and more.
Like other members of the TS-series, the TS9521C features a strong wireless connection, allowing you to easily send print jobs from a laptop, tablet, or phone. Alternatively, you can also print documents from a standard SD card. The 4.3-inch LCD display makes it easy to configure the printer's settings and it's also compatible with Amazon Alexa. Its one downside is speed: the TS9521C has a printing rate of 10 color pages per minute and 15 pages in black and white. While this model isn't known for its speed, it certainly makes up for it with picture quality.
The OfficeJet Pro 7740 offers full wide format printing, up to 22 ppm print speeds, ethernet and wireless connection, smart app functionality and an onboard 2.65-inch color display. It also has office-friendly features fit for a super high volume of print jobs. We’re talking double-sided printing (for full-bleed brochures, for example) and double the tray capacity of some competitors. Those extra features might cost you a higher premium, but will pay dividends in your ability to easily print huge sets of posters, fliers or other wide format media.
Among the photo-focused crowd, few affordable large format printers measure up to the Epson Expression Photo HD XP-15000. Getting professional Ultra HD prints at home or in a small office often requires printers that cost far more or take up too much space. Enter the Epson Expression which can provide everything from specialty media prints to photo prints up to 13 x 19 inches in size. As an ultra-compact wide-format A3+ printer, the footprint of the Epson Expression is around 30-percent less than its predecessor, helping it fit nicely on a desktop or small table.
The inclusion of six-color Claria Photo HD inks provides for a large color gamut as well as beautiful black and white prints. Printing stacks of photos are easily done thanks to the 50-sheet rear tray and 200-sheet front tray. The printer can handle 9.2 pages per minute for black and white prints and 9 pages per minute for color prints — all while the supporting automatic two-sided printing. With AirPrint and wireless connectivity enabled, printing from both wired and wireless devices is easily enabled through the 2.4-inch color LCD display.
We bought two wide-format printers and our reviewers tested them for 18 hours. We asked our testers to consider the most important features when using these printers, from their connectivity to their footprints. We've outlined the major takeaways here so that you, too, know what to look for when shopping.
Multiple paper trays - If you only need to print wide documents occasionally, you can save money by buying a regular printer that has a bypass slot (where you can feed oversize paper one sheet at a time). If you print both wide and standard documents on a regular basis, look for a printer that has more than one paper tray.
Scanning - Some wide-format printers are all-in-one models, which means they can also scan. If you go for one of these, make sure that it has an automatic document feeder (ADF), a feature that allows you to load several pages at once and feeds them, one at a time, into a scanner. For the ultimate in convenience, go with a model that includes an ADF that can scan both sides of your documents at once.
Connectivity - Wide-format printers tend to be a lot bigger than normal printers — and they just get bigger if you go for an all-in-one model. If you don’t want a massive printer to take over your entire desk, look for one that includes Wi-Fi connectivity. This feature provides you with a lot more freedom in choosing where to keep your printer.
Great-quality prints
Can print borderless images
Wireless printing
Slow setup process
Very large footprint
“The quality of this printer is as good as or better than many of the commercial printing services available,” raved one of our testers, “and at a much cheaper cost per print — plus the convenience of being able to print at home immediately.” Other positives, according to our reviewers, were its ability to print borderless images as well as its wireless capabilities. On the other hand, one of our testers wished for an integrated display: “Having to boot up my computer or smartphone every time I wanted to check the ink levels or change the settings is far from convenient,” she explained. And while the printer is large, one of our reviewers liked that it could be “packed up nicely when not in use.”
Easy to use
High-quality printing
Great features
Might be too large for home office
This printer was beloved by our testers for printing “clear and bright” text and images. Our reviewers also found it “very easy” to set up and use, and felt its special features stood out: “I love the cloud-based apps,” one tester declared, “and being able to access documents on OneDrive or Google Drive.” When we asked one of our reviewers what he’d change about this printer, the only thing he mentioned was its size: “I’d perhaps find a way to make it smaller or more compact,” he said, “but otherwise it’s really great.”
Once upon a time, there were two kinds of printers—letter-size ones, and bigger ones—and seldom did the two share much in common. Inkjet printers that could print bigger than letter-size were traditionally expensive, dedicated models reserved for professionals: graphic artists outputting poster-size media, or pro photographers fashioning outsize versions of their best shots. Meanwhile, the very largest models—'large-format' plotters, the big, roll-fed mega-printers you may see in passing at Fedex/Kinko's and graphics shops—were the province of architects and others who needed blanket-size prints for schematics and other technical output. These big printers had big prices to match their specialist bearings. And they still do.
In recent years, though, we've seen a trend toward incorporating limited support for oversize output into consumer and small-business inkjet printers. You won't be able to print poster-size 24-by-36-inch output on these models (at least, not on one sheet without tiling), but these models can do 11-by-17-inch prints (and in some cases, 13-by-19-inch) in small quantities.
If we had to give this emerging group of printers a name, we'd call them 'the occasional oversizers.'
They're a mixed bag, and their dynamics change every time one of the major printer makers introduces a new oversize-capable model. But they're here to stay, as more and more buyers take a fling on these models and realize just how handy it is to be able to print to big sheets now and then. You no longer have to compress and shrink that complex spreadsheet to a single letter-size page, or tape together tiled sheets. And the ability to do a one-off giant vacation-picture print for framing is nice—and many of these printers listed below are very capable of fine photo output.
Pricing on these models varies a bit, but most of the all-in-one machines in the lot we've reviewed below range from $150 to $300.
One thing to note: We've intentionally not covered here professional and semi-pro, photo-centric wide-format models like the venerable Epson Stylus Photo R2000, Epson's various SureColor printers, and the Canon Pixma Pro-1, Pixma Pro-100, and ImagePrograf Pro-1000. These are really a separate class of printer altogether, with a whole different set of considerations around quality, sheer size, ink cost, and support for exotic art-minded media.
If you're looking for the ability to output to bigger-than-letter-size paper stock every now and then, here are the main factors to contemplate.
The most common inkjet 'oversize' paper is known as tabloid stock, or 11 by 17 inches. (The term 'tabloid' is also, at times, used interchangeably with 'A3,' but they are actually two different sizes, if functionally close; A3 measures 11.69 by 16.54 inches.) All of the printers we've rounded up below support at least tabloid printing.
Some of them, however, also support 13-by-19-inch media, or supertabloid. One example is the Epson WorkForce WF-7110. But note that tabloid and supertabloid printing are often referred to collectively as 'wide-format' output in the industry lingo.
This varies widely, and it has a bearing on just how 'occasional use' your printer will be for oversize printing. Some models are best suited for printing a single oversize page once in a while, not churning them out in great stacks. That's because they feed the oversize stock, one sheet at a time, through a paper-bypass slot on the back of the printer. Conversely, models like the HP Officejet Pro 7740 have a tray or trays meant for pre-loading a supply of wide-format stock—which means much less babysitting for multiple-page oversize prints. (That Officejet, for example, has two trays that can each hold stock up to 11 by 17 inches in size.)
Some, but not all, of these printers here have an automatic document feeder (ADF) that handles scanning documents. Of course, that only applies if the printer is an all-in-one (AIO) model. Don't assume, however, that the ADF can necessarily handle all the same paper sizes that the printer can print; check out the details on the manufacturer's spec sheet. Some models may print to tabloid-size stock, but can only scan letter- or legal-size documents.
Also know that ADF functionality varies quite a bit. Some models can scan both sides of their source sheets automatically (a feature known as 'auto-duplexing'), others not. An ADF that cannot auto-duplex will require you to flip double-sided source materials manually to scan or copy both sides, and collation thus may be tricky.
Another ADF-related detail to keep an eye out for has to do with the scanning element itself. An emerging feature on higher-end AIO printers is the 'single-pass' scanner, which has a scanning element above and below the feed path. A single-pass scanner can thus scan both sides of a two-sided document at the same time, effectively doubling the scan speed.
Wide-format printers, even occasional-use models like these, are far from the subcompacts of the printer world. Because their printer paths are by necessity at least 11 or 13 inches wide, you're looking at a printer that takes up lots of desk space because of its extra width versus a letter-size model. Look for built-in Wi-Fi (not always a given), which will give you the flexibility to place your 'oversized oversize' printer in a convenient spot without worrying about running Ethernet or USB cables to it.
Other connectivity features worth investigating include slots for flash-memory cards (if printing directly from camera-media cards is important to you) and a USB port on the front for printing straight from a tethered digital camera, a USB flash drive, or a hard drive. (That's in addition to the conventional USB interface that most inkjets feature.) Some models may support near-field communication (NFC), which implements a hotspot on the front or top of the printer, for wireless tap-to-connect printing from NFC-compliant mobile devices such as smartphones.
You'll also want to look for other support for printing from mobile devices you may own. If you lean Apple in the gear you own, you'll want to look for support for AirPrint; if Android is your tipple, support for the MOPRIA specification will ease printing from that Android tablet or phone.
Here's where our reviews come in. These printers vary widely in price and intended usage, as do their ink schemes: the number and configuration of ink tanks, and their rated costs for each color or monochrome page. Business-centric models will typically have four ink tanks (cyan, magneta, yellow, and black), while photo-minded ones will usually add another tank or two. (These are often lighter variants of the three CMY colors, or a 'photo gray' for finer gradations in monochrome printed content.)
Printing full-page color photos on oversize stock with 100 percent ink coverage can drink down a lot of precious ink quickly, so examine our reviews below for more on the ink economics for each printer.
Pros: Low running costs. Good print quality. Prints, scans, copies, and faxes tabloid-size pages. Single-pass duplexing ADF. Three paper input sources.
Cons: Super-tabloid support would provide greater value.
Bottom Line: The Brother MFC-J6945DW is a wide-format color inkjet all-in-one printer that prints well and is feature-packed and inexpensive to use, making it an exceptional value for small offices.
Read ReviewPros: Excellent output quality. Prints borderless square and tabloid-size media. Has two 100-sheet paper input trays. Smart Home ITFFF enabled. Robust connectivity.
Cons: Lacks NFC and Wi-Fi Direct. No automatic two-sided scanning. High running costs.
Bottom Line: The Canon Pixma TS9520 is a wide-format printer that's rich in features and connectivity, and produces excellent output for low-volume homes and offices.
Read ReviewPros: Excellent photo quality. Prints borderless images from 4 by 6 inches to 13 by 19 inches. Uses new Claria Photo HD inks. Small and light for an oversize printer.
Cons: Running costs a bit high. Prints speeds are slower than the competition.
Bottom Line: The consumer-grade Epson Expression Photo HD XP-15000 Wide-Format Inkjet Printer produces output quality that's comparable with much more expensive professional models.
Read ReviewPros: Good overall output quality. Prints borderless pages up to 13 by 19 inches. Auto-duplexing up to tabloid-size. Supports Wi-Fi Direct and NFC mobile networking. Two large paper drawers.
Cons: High cost per page. No USB thumb drive support.
Bottom Line: The Epson WorkForce WF-7210 is a single-function wide-format printer that's fast and produces quality output, making it an excellent addition to a small office in need of printing pages up to 13 by 19 inches.
Read ReviewPros: Good print quality. Fast. Prints, scans, copies, and faxes tabloid-size pages. Low running costs.
Cons: ADF is manual-duplexing.
Bottom Line: The Brother MFC-J6545DW is a tabloid-size color inkjet all-in-one printer that churns out good-looking output at a fast clip, making it a great value for small offices.
Read ReviewPros: Excellent print quality. Supports borderless square and tabloid-size media. Smart home ITFFF enabled. Robust connectivity.
Cons: Lacks NFC and Wi-Fi Direct. Somewhat slow document printing. Lacks automatic two-sided scanning.
Bottom Line: The Canon Pixma TS9521C combines superb five-ink photo and graphics output, smart home voice support, and a host of scrapbook-friendly features, making it a great wide-format AIO printer for crafters.
Read ReviewPros: Competitively fast. Good overall print quality. Prints tabloid-size pages. Multiple connectivity options. Strong software bundle.
Cons: Less-than-stellar graphics. Cost per page could be lower. Non-duplexing automatic document feeder (ADF).
Bottom Line: The business-oriented Brother MFC-J5330DW is a capable wide-format, low-volume color inkjet all-in-one printer. It's relatively fast, and it prints fairly well overall, albeit with some flawed business graphics.
Read ReviewPros: Speedy. Good text quality. Ethernet, Wi-Fi, USB, and HP wireless direct connectivity. Scans at up to legal size. Prints at up to tabloid (11-by-17 inches) size.
Cons: Slightly sub-par graphics and photo quality. Not the lowest running costs in its class.
Bottom Line: The HP OfficeJet Pro 7720 Wide Format All-in-One Printer is a good choice for small or micro offices, but it's worth paying a bit extra for a more feature-rich competitor.
Read Review