Print From Your Computer : Windows Printing

Select Advanced Options
Click the Advanced tab on the top of the printer settings window to select Advanced options.
1.
Select the Source setting that matches the paper feeding method you are using.
Source settings
Sheet: for sheets of paper loaded in the sheet feeder
Roll: for roll paper or canvas media loaded in the roll paper holder; click the Settings button and select roll paper options
Manual - Roll: for a sheet of compatible paper loaded in the manual feed slot using the single sheet guide
CD/DVD: for a disc loaded in the CD/DVD tray guide; see Print on a CD or DVD
2.
Select the paper type setting that matches the paper you loaded.
3.
Advanced print quality settings
Available print quality settings depend on the selected paper Type setting.
Economy (180 × 180 dpi): for fast printing with reduced print quality
Draft: (180 × 180 dpi): for fast printing with draft quality
Normal (360 × 360 dpi): for everyday text and image printing
Photo (1440 × 720 dpi): for photos and graphics with good print quality and speed
Best Photo (1440 × 1440 dpi): for photos and graphics with high print quality and slower speed (good to use for canvas media)
Photo RPM® (5760 × 1440 dpi): for the best print quality and slowest print speed (best to use for canvas media)
4.
If you loaded roll paper or canvas media, select the width of your roll as the Size setting. Select A4 for 8.3-inch wide rolls or Super B for 13-inch wide rolls.
Note:
For roll paper, make sure the maximum width of your photo is 8.3 or 13 inches to fit in the width of your roll paper (set the margins to 0 in your application software).
Paper size settings
You can load paper in these sizes and select the size in the printer software. (Wider papers are for use only when reducing large images with the Reduce/Enlarge Document option.)
A User Defined option is also available so you can create a custom size.
A4 (8.3 × 11.7 inches)
A6 (4.1 × 5.8 inches)
Letter (8.5 × 11 inches)
Legal (8.5 × 14 inches)
4 × 6 inches
5 × 7 inches
8 × 10 inches
11 × 14 inches
12 × 12 inches
US B (11 × 17 inches)
A3 (11.7 × 16.5 inches)
Super B (13 × 19 inches)
Half Letter (5.5 × 8.5 inches)
5.
If you’re printing borderless photos, select Borderless. For documents or photos with borders, select Borders.
Note:
For borderless photos, make sure you loaded a compatible borderless paper size and type.
6.
Choose Portrait or Landscape orientation for your document or photo.
You can also:
Select Print Options
Advanced print options
Reverse Order: reverses the order in which your document prints to last-page-first. (Do not select when printing on roll paper or canvas media.)
Gloss: applies gloss optimizer on certain paper types. Auto applies it to only to the image area; Full applies it to the entire page (best for photos with borders).
High Speed: speeds up printing, but may reduce print quality (turn off when printing on canvas media).
Edge Smoothing: prints smoother edges on low-resolution images (72 to 120 ppi)
Print Preview: lets you preview how your document or photo will look when printed.
Select Color Management options
Color Management options
Color Controls: let you select a Color Mode and adjust Brightness, Contrast, Saturation, and individual Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow color tones.
Color Mode: selects the main method of printing colors for photos and graphics; EPSON Standard, EPSON Vivid or AdobeRGB.
PhotoEnhance: automatically analyzes your photos and, if necessary, adjusts the brightness, contrast, and saturation. (Do not select when printing on roll paper or canvas media.)
Note:
PhotoEnhance uses a sophisticated face recognition technology to optimize photos that include faces. For this to work, both eyes and the nose must be visible in the subject’s face. If your photo includes a face with an intentional color cast, such as a bronze statue, you may want to turn off PhotoEnhance to retain the special color effects.
ICM: lets you select Off (No Color Adjustment) for a color-managed workflow with ICC profiles in ICC-compliant applications, such as Adobe® Photoshop®.
Save all your selected settings for later use (click Save Setting and name the settings); to use saved settings later, select them from the Custom Settings list
When you’re finished, you’re ready to print.