


The back of the hefty unit has rollers so you can lift the front and roll the printer away from the wall for front feeding. A front tray accommodates single sheets of fine art papers too thick for the rear tray. Up to 150 sheets can be loaded in the rear tray. Using Canon paper and ChromaLife100 inks results in prints with 100-year fade resistance when stored in an archival photo album. The eight-color dye-based ChromaLife100 ink system uses individual cartridges for each color. It prints a 13x19 image in the same time as the original Pro9000 prints an 11x14. The Pro9000 Mark II prints approximately three times faster than its predecessor. Canon Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering technology with two picoliter ink droplets achieve 4800x2400 dpi printing. Highlights of the Pro9000 Mark II's features include: The big print head is the secret to the Pro9000 Mark II's speed. In the case of a "warm" print, slide either of them to the left.Speed Demon.

Try playing around with those, before you do the printing in Preview. Click that and you get a little panel with options of Temperature and Tint. In Preview, under Tools menu, there is Adjust Color option (option+command+C key combo). It's not a bad idea to do this process periodically, because over time, the accuracy of your monitor colours change very gradually.Ī 3rd option I just discovered (because I don't use Preview app often). In System Preferences app > Displays button > Color button > Calibrate button, and follow on-screen instructions from there. Īs to Why, possibly your monitor screen isn't properly calibrated, so, to fix, Option 2 (for more long term results) : On your Mac, there is a means of Calibrating your monitor screen, to show colour more in agreement with printer over a period of time. To fix, Option 1 (temporary, easiest and maybe quickest) : In the 'Color Options' screen of the Print panel, you could try sliding the Cyan colour slider towards the right ('High'), experiment with amount setting, and maybe a bit of the yellow (again, experiment with amount setting, in either direction), to get the colour closest to your satisfaction.
