What If

PICTURES TAKE

LONGER THAN YOU

EXPECT TO PRINT

Be patient. Because of their complexity, pictures, particularly color photographs, can take a long time to print.

If you’re printing a draft, you can speed up printing by using EconoFast print quality (directions on page 10), though the quality won’t be the best. Or you can turn off color altogether and print a fast, inexpensive black draft.

PICTURES DONT LOOK AS CRISP AS THE SCANNED ORIGINAL

The picture might have been scanned at a higher number of dots per inch (dpi) than your printer can print. To get the best results, scan photographs at 150 or 300 dpi. If you scan them at a higher dpi, you won’t improve the print quality, and the pictures will take longer to print.

Get your photos scanned at your local camera shop. For a small fee, you can have an entire roll of pictures put on a CD-ROM disk. Be sure to ask your camera shop to also put a CD-viewing application on the disk with your pictures.

Take a digital picture. A digital camera bypasses film entirely and makes the picture into a computer file. Call a full-service copy shop or a camera supply store about renting one.

22