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| Canon Pixma Pro9500 Professional Large Format Inkjet Printer (0373B001AA) | 
enlarge | Brand: Canon Category: CE
Buy New: Too low to display
New (31) Used (1)
Avg. Customer Rating: 23 reviews
Color: grey Media: Electronics Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 System Memory: 0.042 Modem: None Shipping Weight (lbs): 43 Dimensions (in): 26 x 13.9 x 7.6
MPN: 0373B001AA Model: 0373B001AA UPC: 013803051063 EAN: 0013803051063 ASIN: B000NNAYW8
Release Date: May 15, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Features:
| • | Professional inkjet printer features a 10-color pigment ink system for extraordinarily vivid images up to 13 x 19 inches | | • | FINE printhead technology for maximum 4800 x 2400 dpi resolution | | • | 2 separate paper paths support fine art paper | | • | Includes matte black, photo black, and gray inks for professional-quality black and white prints | | • | Dimensions: 26 x 7.5 x 14 in. (WxHxD); weighs 30.8 pounds |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description color print resolution: 4800 x 2400 dpi * 10-color Lucia pigment ink system with individual color cartridges * Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering (FINE) technology * supports a wide variety of professional and fine art printing papers up to 1.2mm thick * Direct Print Port for photo printing with PictBridge-compliant cameras and camcorders *
Manufacturer Product Description In one giant leap, the all-new PIXMA Pro9500 takes your work from merely "beautiful" to "extraordinary." With 10 full-time color pigment inks, advanced new software, camera-direct printing of contact sheets, and support for fine art papers up to 13x19 inch, it's the new standard for creating your own professional images.  Professional color and detail. View larger. |
For photographers that need high-contrast or beautifully reproduced colors, photographers need look no further than the PIXMA Pro9500. Its 10-color pigment ink system includes gray, black and matte black cartridges that collectively produce monochrome photographs of unrivaled quality on both fine art paper and glossy photo paper. With pigment ink, photographers will enjoy incredibly smooth gradations and can create long-lasting prints that resist the damaging effects of light for up to 100 years. Professional color and detail In one giant leap, the all-new PIXMA Pro9500 Photo Printer sets the new standard for creating your own professional images. It features Canon Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering (FINE) technology, producing a maximum resolution of 4800 x 2400 dpi. Its high-precision, 7,680-nozzle print head is designed to deliver thousands of 3-picoliter ink droplets per second in one pass. This high-density ink placement produces incredibly sharp detail and minimal graininess, enabling you to create beautiful photo lab quality photos up to 13 x 19 inch. Full time, 10-color pigment ink system For high-contrast photographs and beautifully reproduced colors, look no further than the PIXMA Pro9500 Photo Printer. Its 10-color pigment ink system includes gray, photo black and matte black cartridges that let you produce monochrome photographs of superb quality, both on Fine Art and Glossy photo paper. These pigment inks yield incredibly smooth gradations, creating long-lasting prints that can resist the damaging effects of light for up to 100 years. Plus, all 10 inks sit in the printer at once, eliminating the inconvenience of ink swapping. 
| Exclusive Canon software for photo fine-tuning. Want more control over the print process? With the Canon Easy-PhotoPrint Pro software plug-in, this next-generation photo printer can be seamlessly integrated into a computer workflow. Easy-PhotoPrint Pro augments other post-production software, including Canon Digital Photo Professional software (DPP version 2.1) and Adobe Photoshop CS/CS2 software. You can use customized layout options to produce contact prints, prints with shooting information?even pattern prints of a single image that let you select the optimal color balance, brightness and contrast settings. For further fine-tuning, choose from three color adjustments that can be saved with personal settings: Enable ICC Profile, Photo Color and Linear Tone.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 18 more reviews...
Amazing results with 13 x 19 art paper & monochrome! December 21, 2008 If your wanting to invest in your digital imaging addiction like me, then this is the printer! I bought this along with a new Quad-core Mac Pro & 30 inch cinema display, & I am completely blown away with the results I am getting! Digital photography can be an expensive pastime or a relatively cheap hobby, it depends on what kind of results your looking for.
So far so good December 15, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I've had this printer for a few months now and it hasn't given me any real reasons to complain. It is large, make sure you've got the area for it. I use it as a back up printer if I need something NOW. I've used Illford Pearl paper and the images are crisp, sharp and colorful. Adjusting color was not a problem, I'm using it with CS3. I've printed about 45-50 8x10 prints and still have plenty of ink right out of the box, and four full color 10x13 prints on gloss. No problems, but if I need something for a client it won't come out of this printer. I'll use my service. It is still an inkjet printer. Printing pictures of little league teams and the such is okay, family portraits need professional printers.
Fine But Finicky December 12, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I have owned this printer for four months. I came close to returning it the first week because I was spoiled by my Canon S9000 which is pretty much WYSIWYG. Here's my review:
This printer is a bit of an orphan. It is too complicated and costly for people expecting plug-n-print results, but it is too small (13 inch carriage) to enter the ranks of pro gear.
If you do not know how to use or obtain profiles, don't bother. The built-in profiles for Canon media are not very good, either.
If you don't have Photoshop or PhotoPaint, and just want to print JPGs of your kids, save your money and get a $200 printer at a big box store.
If you call Canon tech support, be sure to specify that it is the Pixma Pro. They only have a few techs that specialize in this printer.
Having said that, if you do meet all these conditions, are comfortable with color management, and understand the limitations of various media, you can get wonderful results. But be sure you have some other task to do once you hit print, because this printer is slooooww. I feel like the Pope in "The Agony and The Ecstasy" asking Michelangelo, "When will it be finished?"
My only real gripe is with the software and firmware. Canon has this silly notion that you can't print border-to-border on l3 x 19 media, so it tries to impose a 35 mm border. You can circumvent this by specify a non-art media type, and then twiddling the settings. Important: always check the block in the printer driver that says preview. That has saved me $$ in paper and ink as I've caught something that was not evident on-screen in my app.
The other firmware problem is that the printer loses track of the carts every so often. Then you waste 3 minutes after you raise the lid while the printer goes through a long song and dance before it brings the print head to the service position. Sometimes just doing this will clear the fault. Don't jump at the ink out mesages. You can still get a few prints out of a cart after that message pops up. All printer manufacturers are in the business of selling you ink and media; the hardware is secondary.
Terrible quality September 17, 2008 2 out of 12 found this review helpful
I bought a Canon Pixma Pro9000 a couple years ago, and I didn't use it very often. Now the printer is broken. I've had a Canon i860. It also only lasted a couple of years before one of the printer heads stopped printing. I owned both Epson and HP printers and they all lasted more than a couple years. My HP Photosmart 7350 is still working. The only complain I have about that printer is that the ink doesn't last long. That's the reason I switched to Canon. I think the image quality of the Canon printer is OK, but the hardware quality of their printers is worthless.
Canon needs better R&D before releasing a product. (VERY restricting) August 26, 2008 7 out of 8 found this review helpful
Several problems with this printer, please do your research to save you much aggravation. Well documented problem with glossy paper is the least of the its problems. I print predominantly on matte papers, and gloss is not a concern for me. However, printing on Canon Matte Photo Paper gives very mediocre results, the prints are low-contrast and dull. One would think that it's a character of a matte print, however, printing on Fine Art Matte Photo Paper gives excellent color and contrast that is extremely close to the original image. You would think, the problem is solved, right? Wrong. The fine Art paper, though practically the same thickness as regular matte photo paper cannot be auto fed, which means you have to reconfigure the printer (watch "Transformers" for reference) and move it very far away from any walls, front-feed the paper and just when you think you have everything squared away, you are forced to two options: either print 13X19 or Letter size (nothing else) AND get a 35mm (1 1/2") margin. Selecting custom size forces you to print on any paper BUT Fine Art. Getting custom color profiles does not correct the issue. Printing on Fine Art paper with any selection to allow auto-feed or lesser margin will ruin the color, CATCH 22 ALL THE WAY. Seems like many people in forums are having similar problems and no one has found a fix for it. Canon's tech support says "you are using the printer not in the way it was meant to be used." I thought the word "Art" included "Creativity" in the definition. Being forced to ONLY 2 SIZES and 35mm Margin if you want to get a decent print (and that's at $5 a sheet!) does not fit the "PRO" or the "Fine Art" definition in my opinion.
I really could go on about many other caveats I've discovered, but these MAJOR things should steer many a Photographer/Artist away from this restricting machine.
Do not blame Pigment Inks for poor contrast. HP and Epson manage to do fine on any paper, as well as Canon on $5/sheet paper (only when you print on 75% of it).
I'm returning the printer and going back to the drawing board (HP or Epson).
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