Resolved Question: printing my mini comics from home... what printer should I buy for best ink value?
okay so I have these mini comic books I made that are going to be on normal 8.5x11 paper which will be folded and stapled. -my comics are black and white (pure black, no shading)-the resolution of the art is 300dpiI have up to $400 that I can spend on a printer, I do not care if the printer itself is expensive what I need is a printer that has dirt cheap ink. I need something that can print 8 double sided 8.5x11's for under $1 worth of ink. And I need it to print at least 8 pages a minute. Also I don't want to have to swap ink carts constantly It would be extra awesome if it could print at least 200 pages per cart (which I would still need to swap often)I test printed a couple copies on my leximark and the ink cost is just horrid, i can print 5 issues and than the cartridge runs out, which makes it cost me almost $4 for each issue. please don't suggest Ka-Blam or other P.O.D. services, I want to print these from my house myself for a personal feel. thanks for any help you guys can offer I'm really scratching my head right now trying to figure this out so I can get back to making more comics.never mind I figured it out myself... thanks for nothing yahoo answers, i bet if i asked some stupid question about "babbi" I'd have 100 replies by now "It's all about connecting people to the brand and involving them to the Jeep experience," said James Kenyon, Chrysler spokesman. Grading your collection can become more of an art than a science, so you need to maintain as much objectivity as possible. He distanced himself, feeling that as long as he didn't see any of the film and had nothing to do with it, everything will be fine. The manga holds a more important place in Japanese culture, and is both well respected as an art form and also as a form of popular literature. Those same ten people from the book example certainly saw the same images of a film. To make the character more realistic Batman Comics showed Batman battle his enemies as a vigilante using only his combat skills, his strength and his intellect. In many of the Batman comics Batman is shown as a silent and grim crime fighter who battles his enemies by himself.
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