Alan, thanks for the comment. since no one else has responded, I'm figuring that most people on this list are printing for themselves, and that the larger sizes are not within the capabilities of the smaller footprint Epson printers. I have a pricelist from a company called WCI, that does charge $95 for an 8.5" x 11" print... it goes upwards to $299 for a 24 x 36". They include a drum scan of the image, and a proof in the price, so that explains the print price. On Cone's website, he charges $30 for the first print - 8.5 x 11", and a 24 x 36 would go for $150. Proofs are additional cost, and the scan will cost you from $65-200. so pricing is similar between these two, with Cone probably ending up costing more... not sure what his imaging pricing is all about, guess that is the selective work involved to get the print right. Additional proofs are extra. I'm not sure how many people are offering services to the public using quad or hex B&W inks, or what the demand is. Dugall in NYC, also offers some kind of service, not sure I have not checked... but I was told by an exhibiting photographer that they used them to output the show, and were looking for someone that could come closer to matching what they really wanted. I suspect, it takes some dedicated interface to get it right with the customer, and the big labs will not be able to handle that. Just as in B&W silver halide based fiber printing, you have to go to a particular type lab specializing in B&W, or do it yourself to get it right. Mark MacKinnon 320studio New York Message: 13 Date: Sat, 13 Apr 2002 17:32:38 -0700 From: Alan Zinn <AZinn@...> Subject: Re: pricing Mark, I had a brochure from a full-service print outfit that advertized $100 for an 8 x 10 Piezo print. Can't lay my hands on it now but I was shocked at the prices. Time to hang out a shingle! At 09:33 AM 4/12/2002 -0700, you wrote: >Hi group, > >I'm curious how members on this list may price themselves on the >commercial market for the prints they are making. I've seen several ways >of doing this, from a listing of sizes and related charges, to a per >square inch formula. > >How do you differentiate between a smaller size print (11x14), that >takes just as much time to print as a large one. Perhaps a set-up fee to >begin the process, and what about a proof first for larger size prints... > >what is a fair price to charge a customer for a 24" x 28" print on >archival paper and using MIS inks? > >what is a fair price to charge for a 30 x 40 or 40 x 60? > >thanks for any input... > >Mark MacKinnon >320studio
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pricing
2002-04-15 by Mark MacKinnon
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