If your printout has a quality problem but the image looks fine on your computer screen, check the solutions in this section.
• Select a higher Quality Option or Print Quality and turn off High Speed mode in the Windows, Mac OS X 10.4, or Mac OS X 10.5/10.6 printer software.
• Make sure the paper Type or Media Type setting matches the paper you loaded.
•
• Align the print head.
• Your product won’t operate properly if it’s tilted or at an angle. Place it on a flat, stable surface that extends beyond the base in all directions.
•
• Use a support sheet with special paper (such as a sheet of plain paper beneath the special paper sheet), or try loading your paper one sheet at a time.
• Align the print head.
•
• If you are using double-sided paper and printing heavily saturated or dark images on the front side of the paper, you may notice that smudges or marks appear on the front when you print the second side. If one side of the paper will contain a lighter image or text, print that side first to eliminate marks or smudging.
• Clean the rollers inside your printer.
• Make sure the paper Type or Media Type setting matches the paper you loaded.
• Make sure your paper isn’t damaged, old, dirty, or loaded face-down. If it is, reload a new stack of paper with the printable side up; it is usually brighter or whiter than the other side. For best results, use genuine Epson paper.
• Select a higher Quality Option or Print Quality, and turn off High Speed in the Windows, Mac OS X 10.4, or Mac OS X 10.5/10.6 printer software.
• Select Photo RPM (Max dpi) for the Quality Type (Windows) or Photo RPM for the Print Quality (Mac OS X 10.4 or Mac OS X 10.5/10.6). Remember that this setting increases print time.
• Align the print head.
•
• Make sure your Windows, Mac OS X 10.4, or Mac OS X 10.5/10.6 printer software is not set to print in grayscale.
•
•
• Try changing the Gamma setting in your Windows, Mac OS X 10.4, or Mac OS X 10.5/10.6 printer software.
• Your printed colors can never exactly match your on-screen colors. However, you can use a color management system to get as close as possible. Try using ICM (Windows) or ColorSync (Mac OS X 10.4).