- Inkjet printer offers borderless copy during sizes up to thirteen by nineteen inches
- Prints during 1200 x 1200 dpi black fortitude as well as 4800 x 1200 dpi optimized color
- Connects to home network around Ethernet; additionally has USB 2.0 as well as discretionary wireless connectivity
- Backed by 1-year warranty
- Device measures 25.3 x 10 x twenty-four inches (WxHxD)
Product Description
The idealisation HP 9-ink print printer written for the professional, excellent art, mural as well as critical pledge photographer who wants finished, professional-quality photos up to thirteen by nineteen inches to sell, exhibit, or admire for generations.1 Photos can final up to 100 years when displayed underneath glass2 or over 200 years in the print album.3 The HP Photosmart 8750 produces 9-ink tone prints as well as provides tone government controls as well as conspicuous printer coherence to furnish picturesque tone as well as loyal black-and-white photos which have been loyal to your vision…. More >>
HP Photosmart 8750 Large-Format Professional Photo Printer
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Tags: 8750, largeformat, Photo, Photosmart, Printer, Professional

This is my first actual photo printer. I saw it on sale and decided to buy. It produces some very nice pictures using only 3 ink cartidges. I am able to get many pictures from these ink cartridges. Being new to these printers I wasnt to sure on what I was going to use the 8750 for.
As of now I have only printed 1 13 x 19 photo for a friend. Iam getting around more and will be using it more. One more feature is the LCD that I thought displayed the picture, but it only gives you a number to use when using the memory card slots. [...]
We’ve had the printer up and running now for two weeks and so far it does exactly what it’s supposed to do. Not the fastest machine availble but for the price- well worht it- so far….
I’ve had this printer for several years now. I bought it (at an incredible bargain price) refurbished, which worried me at first. But it has turned out to be a super performer.
The (photo) print quality is very good, and the large format images are impressive.
On the down side, you start to realize you (and other people) don’t have the wall space for too many tabloid or B-size prints. And framing is expensive.
Also, I like the fact that this is a network printer, but the print drivers stopped working after a year or so (reinstalling them is on my to-do list). I can still use it by reading media cards directly from the printer.
I have printed over 100 large (12×16″ or larger) photos, and countless smaller ones. The ink does last reasonably long, but a big print is going to cost you probably $3 or more in ink, plus the paper. But it’s well worth it.
I bought this printer used for $90. Set up via Ethernet was relatively easy, although I haven’t been able to get USB to work. I’ve printed on HP Premium Plus Soft Gloss, and the quality is very very good. Color rendition could be better, but allowing CS3 to control color helps.
I’ve also printed on an Epson 3800 and 7800, and this printer is not far off in terms of quality prints – with the exception of deep blue skies. The HP 8750 does not handle extensive areas of deep blue sky well (golden hour at Sunrise/Sunset). The subtle tonal variations tend to get lost.
Supplies (consumables such as 3 ink catridges and 25 sheets of premium paper) run about $140 for 30 8×10 prints. That averages to $4.50 per 8×10 print . . . ouch, but not much worse than other photo prints. The standard cartridges for photos are HP Photo Blue (101), HP Tri-color (97), and HP Photo Grey (102). There are different cartridges available for special printing, such as sepia or colored line drawings.
I’ve called HP for customer support. The first person hung up on me after realizing they could not fix the problem. The second person was much more helpful. I’ve heard some people describe HP support as a “mine field”, but you can get quality technical support if you are dilligent.
I like this printer alot. I will use it for art school homework, but probably not for my fine art prints that I intend to hang – like I said, color rendition can be very very good, but for certain colors is not consistent.
Not what I was hoping for…upgraded from a CP1700….Oooops.
This thing eats ink, is ridiculously slow, prints faded images (with no insight from tech support) and consistanly pulls multiple pages.
Oh but it looks nice. No more HP’s for this kid…