Museum-Quality Giclée Print
Giclée printing is a premium fine art printing method that uses archival pigment-based inks and advanced inkjet technology to create museum-quality reproductions.
This process captures the full depth, vibrant color range, and fine details of the original artwork with exceptional precision.
Giclée prints are highly valued for their longevity, maintaining rich and true colors for decades when properly cared for.
They are widely regarded as the industry standard for museum exhibitions, gallery displays, and professional art collectors who demand the highest level of quality.
Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100 & Archival Cotton Paper
Each print is created using the Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100, a professional-grade printer renowned for its ability to deliver ultra-precise, rich, and consistent color output.
The artwork is printed on museum-grade, 100% acid-free cotton paper, selected specifically for its archival qualities. The cotton fibers provide a luxurious, textured surface that holds ink beautifully.
The acid-free nature of the paper ensures strong resistance to yellowing and deterioration over time, allowing the print to retain its original appearance for decades.
The natural matte finish enhances color richness, fine detail, and tonal depth without introducing glare.
Ultra-High Resolution & Print Quality
Prints are produced at an ultra-high 1200 PPI (pixels per inch), delivering exceptional clarity, fine detail, and smooth gradients.
PPI measures how many digital pixels are packed into every inch of a print. At 1200 PPI, the image retains extreme sharpness even when viewed up close, making the reproduction appear nearly indistinguishable from the original artwork.
The Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100 can produce prints up to A2 size (420 × 594 mm) on standard cut-sheet paper.
While A2 is the largest standard A-series format supported, the printer also accommodates custom paper sizes up to 17 inches (432 mm) in width and 129 inches (3.27 meters) in length, allowing the creation of high-quality panoramic prints.