

Pros: The site is smart and easy to use and prevents you from enlarging images that are likely to print poorly. Doing that saved me a lot, including 25 percent on a Snapfish order and 30 percent at CVS.ĪDORAMAPIX.COM Adorama is a venerable New York City camera shop, but you need not be a resident to visit its website. But if you don’t obsess over nuances, you’ll find that some drugstores do just fine.īefore I delve into the results, one tip: Coupons for many of these sites are available on (or just go to and type the name of the company and the word “code”).
#WALGREENS PHOTO PRINT PRICES PROFESSIONAL#
In general, you’ll get more consistency - and better depth and more detail - from professional developers. Quality varies from store to store, even within the same chain.ģ. The quality you get from sites like Shutterfly and Snapfish varies, depending on whether you have prints mailed to you or pick them up at a store.Ģ. Nonetheless, it revealed a few rules of thumb:ġ.

Obviously a technician can have an off day, or maybe one drugstore is better than another at making prints,so this is an unscientific experiment. You can edit photos on these sites, but to keep things simple, I didn’t (though I allowed for color correction if given the option). The list includes professional-quality labs, drugstores such as CVS and Walgreens (Target, Walmart and Costco also print photos) as well as the usual suspects, Snapfish and Shutterfly. The prices that follow are what I paid and may vary, depending on where you live and what you order. None of the companies were told I was writing this column, and my order was the same to each one: a set of glossy 4-by-6 prints and two 11-by-14 prints. The shots included landscapes, portraits and details, along with a few images that were blurry or low resolution. To find out, I uploaded the same 50 images to the websites of more than half a dozen companies to see how each would handle various conditions - photographs taken at night, during sunset, from a plane. But which sites produce the most eye-catching prints? The Internet is rife with companies willing to print your digital snapshots for little more than the cost of a Cronut. Barry Schwartz, the psychologist and author of “The Paradox of Choice,” once said: “With so many options to choose from, people find it very difficult to choose at all.” That’s how I feel when I want to print a few vacation photos.
