![]() ![]() Once you have your photos uploaded to Snapfish, you're in for a treat. You can change the preselected Best Fit sizes to any of the other options. The ordering page tells you which photos fit best on a 4-by-5.3-inch print because of the camera's aspect ratio of 4:3 (used by smartphones) instead of 3:2 (used by most digital cameras), marking them with an orange Best Fit label. Mpix and Nations charge extra for human-powered color correction, but the only option in Snapfish is the automated color correction on the Edit page (see below). Snapfish supports drag-and-drop from Windows File Explorer and macOS Finder to the upload window. If you have files that big, look to Mpix or Walmart Photo. That means it can't handle a 108-megapixel shot from my Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra. Snapfish allows file sizes up to 150MB and up to 100 megapixels. Some of the services I tested, including Nations Photo Lab, also support the more professional-oriented TIFF format. Not all online photo printing services support the storage-saving HEIC/HEIF format, which is too bad. Note that Snapfish lets you upload JPG/JPEG, PNG, and HEIC/HEIF file formats. It also has Standard Resolution selected by default-I suggest changing it to Full Resolution if you want the best quality prints. An Upload Preferences checkbox in the lower-right corner lets you choose whether to apply automatic red-eye correction and color correction. ![]() You can upload photos directly from your computer and import them from Facebook, Google Photos, and Instagram. You upload image files or choose the printed product type first and then upload. It's pretty much the same interface used by CVS Photo. Snapfish's interface is more modern and, well, snappy than Amazon Prints' and Nations Photo Lab's. Snapfish lets you check out with PayPal, too. I appreciate that you don't have to enter payment details to create an account. You can start using Snapfish before you even create an online account (simply by entering your name and email address and choosing a password), but I recommend setting up your account before you get too far so you can keep track of your orders. Premium options like foil printing and scalloped edges drive up the price even more, as does the convenient Mail for Me option. These prices go down as you increase the number of cards you want, but you can find cheaper cards at Walmart Photo. (Credit: Snapfish)įor holiday cards, Snapfish offers a huge selection of designs-1,846 in all-with prices starting at $2.10 for a flat 4-by-8 card and $4.74 for a 5-by-7 folding card. Shutterfly's selection is a bit wider, though, adding plates and shower curtains, for example. Putting Your Photos on Gifts and Cardsīeyond standard photo printing, Snapfish lets you print your pictures on a panoply of other objects, including books, cards, calendars, home decor (pillows, blankets), puzzles, playing cards, and iPhone cases. Premium online photo printing services charge more for 4-by-6s-Nations Photo Lab and Mpix both charge 36 cents. Shutterfly charges 20 cents, though if you order through the mobile app, 4-by-6s and 4-by-4s are free, and you only pay for shipping. Amazon Prints is the cheapest for an 8-by-10 ($2.09).īy comparison, Walmart Photo only charges a little more for a 4-by-6 (14 cents). Oddly, Snapfish's $2.99 price for an 8-by-10 is only average, price-wise. Some larger blowups are also at the low end of the price spectrum, with 5-by-7s costing just 69 cents (the same as Amazon Prints). ![]() How Much Do Snapfish Prints Cost?Īs noted, Snapfish's per-print price starts at a mere 10 cents for a 4-by-6-inch print. And for one-hour local pickup, you can't go wrong with Walgreens Photo. For the best quality overall, we recommend Nations Photo Lab. That said, our Editors' Choice winner for value among photo printing services is Walmart Photo thanks to higher-quality 14-cent prints. The two are owned by the same company and deliver the same quality of prints-which is merely mediocre-but Snapfish charges half of what Shutterfly does for a standard print. Alongside Shutterfly, Snapfish is one of the most well-known online photo print services around. That still makes it the cheapest service for turning your digital pictures into physical keepsakes. For the past several years, Snapfish was the last remaining member of the 9-cent-per-photo club, but now it charges a penny more for a 4-by-6 print. ![]()
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