With summer a peak season for photography, you might be considering a compact snapshot printer. These photo specialists are
typically about the size of a hardcover book, making them easy to pack in your luggage for a road trip. Many run on battery
power, in addition to AC with the included adapter, providing a handy photo station at a picnic or other event.
You can also use these pint-sized printers at home. They typically require 60 to 90 seconds and 25 cents or so per 4x6 print,
and they're faster and cheaper to run than most full-sized inkjets. Among those bigger units in our most recent
Ratings of snapshot printers (available to subscribers), only the Kodak EasyShare 5500 will print very good photos as quickly and as cheaply as some of
the best snapshot printers we mention in our
CR Recommended models (also available to subscribers). But snapshot models lack the versatility of larger inkjets, and the best don't match the
excellent photo quality of some inkjets. And on price, no printer beats the least-expensive retail photofinishers, which charge
as little as 9 cents per print online.
That said, nothing's easier to use than a snapshot printer. You connect the camera directly to the unit via the supplied mini-USB
cord or insert a memory card into a slot on the printer. Some models allow a wireless connection to a Bluetooth-enabled camera
or camera phone. There are no settings to adjust, and precut paper eliminates the need to trim.
How to chooseConsider cost. Paying more for the printer or per print doesn't mean you'll get better photos. Over time differences in printers' operating
costs can outweigh differences in purchase price.
Consider printing technology. Snapshot printers use inkjet or dye-sublimation technology. Both types are capable of fine photo quality, but dye-sublimation
models, which use colored ribbons in a cartridge, tend to be smaller and their prints more water-resistant.
Weigh portability. The models we tested weighed from 3 to 7.3 pounds. Rechargeable battery packs are a $50 to $100 option. The Epson and HP
models printed 90 to 100 pictures on a charge; the Canons, 50 to 70.
Weigh other features. Look for other conveniences, such as large LCD screens that make viewing and editing photos easier. A few printers let you
add captions, frames, or borders. The HP Photosmart A826 includes a stylus so you can electronically write on a photo.