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Old 31-01-09, 11:30
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Joe Joe is offline  
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Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Manchester, United Kingdom
Age: 51
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Hi there.
In my view the best method is to send them through a kiosk and have them chemical 'wet' printed, at your favourite lab.
However, for home printing of photos you want to last, I think Dye-sub method prints seem to be less prone to fade over time.
Lots of new ink-jet technology now exists to replicate some of the archive qualities. Most major paper manufacturers have archive paper listed. I'm yet to be convinced though.
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