Getting Started Guide
About Photo Cropping
When the printer scales a photo to your selected photo size, it attempts to find the best fit possible without omitting any part of the original photo. Depending on the photo, this means it might not fill up the entire selected size in both directions.
If you prefer that the photo is the exact size you selected (for example, 4x6”), then the photo can be cropped. This removes a small part of the photo. Incidentally, it is what a traditional photo processor does when enlarging your prints. The photo will fill the photo size to all four sides.
No Cropping. The full photo is printed, but it does not fill the entire photo size. This is the printer default.
Cropping. Fills the photo size, but some of the original photo must be cropped (in this case, on the left and right).
About DPOF
DPOF (Digital Print Order Format) is a standard adopted by many digital camera manufacturers. It allows you to mark photos for printing using your digital camera (check your camera’s documentation to determine if it supports DPOF). The 1400P can then read the DPOF file to determine which photos to print or save, so you don’t have to print an index or select photos on the printer.
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