The Epson Stylus Photo RX585 is a flexible photo all in one product featuring superb quality photo printing at home. Offering high gloss, long lasting, vibrant photos and low running costs, the RX585 is the perfect home photo lab.
* High quality, lost cost printing with individual ink cartridges from only £6.99
* More value multipacks available
* Exclusive Epson Claria photographic ink system
* 6 colour for premium quality photo prints
* Preview your photos on an adjustable 2.5 inch LCD preview monitor
* CDR/DVD printing functionality with motorised tray
* Print photos direct from memory cards and PictBridge enabled cameras
* Scan photos and documents with a 1200dpi scanner
* Photocopy in black & white and colour
* Borderless photos from 10x15cm up to A4 size
The RX585 offers everything a photographer needs
If you are an enthusiastic digital photographer and are looking for an all-in-one unit, the Epson RX585 offers you top-end print and scan quality - and - low running cost!
The printer of the RX585 has a high definition resolution (up to 5760 x 1440 dpi), which works harmoniously with a 1200dpi scanner. It uses the much applauded Claria inks (a six dye-based ink system that is capable of putting down drops of ink as small as 1.5 pictolitres).
The average price for an original ink cartridge tends to be £10 for most manufacturers. However, these Epson ink cartridges are only £6.99 per colour. Better still, save another £4.20 per set by ordering an Epson multipack. For original and compatible cartridges, please see below.
Dazzling technology
The scanner/printer of the RX585 can analyse and enhance a picture by recognising elements like skin tones, skylines and landscapes. It will even recognise faded photos, and when you press the copy button, the multifunctional will ask you / give you the option whether it should restore the original colours? Very clever indeed.
This multifunctional is so clever that if you place a CD/DVD on the scanner/copier glass and press copy, the RX585 will recognise the CD, determine where it is, scan it and copy the result onto a new CD in the CD tray. Now, how much time (and fiddling) will that save?