In the studio I use the Canon Pixma Pro 9000 Mk II. This is the previous generation to the Pro-100. It is a fantastic printer and works well for me for proofing.
At school they had the Pixma Pro 9500 Mk II printers. These are the previous generation of the Pro-10. I found the output of the 9000 and 9500 to be pretty comparable. The 9500 inks are a bit more water fast. (I was producing cyanotypes on top of prints and the 9500 inks held up well to the 5 minute wash cycle on uncoated Arches watercolor paper. Yes I was really holding an inkjet print under running water for five minutes.)
Now at school they have the Pixma Pro-1 printers but I have not gotten a good feel for them yet. We are not allowed to change the paper type on the ones setup in the classrooms. As a result everything is printed as semi-gloss and that doesn't always work out so well. This is due to the way the IT department has setup the computers rather than a shortcoming of the printers.
For the gallery my prints are done on a Chromira ProLab, but I don't own that myself. It does, however, produce stunning prints.
At school they had the Pixma Pro 9500 Mk II printers. These are the previous generation of the Pro-10. I found the output of the 9000 and 9500 to be pretty comparable. The 9500 inks are a bit more water fast. (I was producing cyanotypes on top of prints and the 9500 inks held up well to the 5 minute wash cycle on uncoated Arches watercolor paper. Yes I was really holding an inkjet print under running water for five minutes.)
Now at school they have the Pixma Pro-1 printers but I have not gotten a good feel for them yet. We are not allowed to change the paper type on the ones setup in the classrooms. As a result everything is printed as semi-gloss and that doesn't always work out so well. This is due to the way the IT department has setup the computers rather than a shortcoming of the printers.
For the gallery my prints are done on a Chromira ProLab, but I don't own that myself. It does, however, produce stunning prints.