I have a Lanzer VDB2500 and it says it has bluetooth. My phone finds it but it says it needs a passcode. The support people said that it should be 9999 or 0000 but I've tried both and nothing works.
What in the heck is going on? Is there a default passcode for the Lanzer VBD2500? I've tried...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
300 is exactly right and fine for your printer.
You could probably go down to 200 or 240 PPI and not see a big difference. (You'd have smaller files and be able to make larger prints).
In general:
Photos: 240-300 PPI
Charts etc. : 150-200 PPI
Text: 100-150PPI
Your medium is important too...
You can cover your oils with plastic or foil but the thing about oil paints is that they're just a drop of turpentine away from being less viscus.
You can mix Linseed Oil into Oil Paints to thin them and change their viscosity and you can break oil paint down with turpentine or white spirits...
Unless you want to do some sexual favors for a few Adobe Execs I really don't see how you could get it for free. You would have to pirate a copy wich is illegal! Adobe keeps PIRATEs at BAY with serial numbers and other types of software protection.
Save up your pennies I guess.