

- #MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW SKIN#
- #MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW SOFTWARE#
- #MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW FREE#
Honestly, while I think photobooks are pretty cool, I feel like the quality just doesn’t match up to normal prints.
#MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW SKIN#
I liked these the best – strong clear colours, natural looking skin tones, not too dark or too light. To be honest, I prefer the prints I got done at Warehouse Stationery, of all places. Snapfish’s prints were high contrast, with very dark blacks. Shutterfly’s prints came out a little light, and lower contrast.
#MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW FREE#
(My flatmate who also has a Snapfish book had the same issue.) The next 2 books were fine, though.īoth Snapfish and Shutterfly offer 50 free prints when you sign up, so I took the opportunity to get some wedding prints and compare quality. Quality wise, the first book that arrived had the inside cover bubbling up a bit as if it was damp or not glued together properly. And the settings didn’t seem to save across different login sessions (eg, I like the side frame to hide photos that I’ve already used or removed). I couldn’t seem to nudge using arrow keys and their guidelines/snap rules are pretty basic. It’s nearly impossible to find a nice plain theme if you just want your photos to shine and be the focus.

I found the interface cluttered and overwhelming. That said, it’s probably my least favourite site to use for actually making photobooks. Snapfish has a local operation, so it wins out in terms of cost and shipping time.

The physical quality of the books is pretty impressive they feel well made and include a lovely waffle-textured page as the first and last. That said, I found it unintuitively difficult to resize photo boxes (I had to google this) and the popup menu for editing an already-placed photo did not fit my screen. Shutterfly’s got a pretty clean interface, and I liked that you could simply hover over a photo for an enlarged view.

But I got a free book courtesy of Revanche, so gave them a go (free book but paid shipping wound up costing about the same as a local Snapfish book – more on that later). Shutterfly is US-based, so shipping is ouchies. Then it was time to make some travel photo books, which I wasn’t willing to spend as much on.
#MYPUBLISHER PHOTOBOOK REVIEW SOFTWARE#
Five stars for Mixbook (and their cute software that let me rate their response by clicking on a smiley face in the CSR’s email signature). Lo and behold, they made another and sent me a perfect copy. I would have let it go, except this was my wedding album! I wanted perfection! So I emailed and asked nicely if anything could be done about it. The downside was that when my book arrived, there were 2 small ink dots on one of the pages. Mixbook’s software is web-based, with a fairly clean design and is simple enough to use. I went for a lay-flat photobook, with thick cardstock pages. This time around I signed up to try Mixbook. I checked the FAQs and Googled, but couldn’t find a fix that worked. It just wouldn’t connect to the site (or something). I downloaded the programme, spent ages creating my album, and then when I went to place my order – crickets. I actually quite liked the software, from the layouts to the ability to organise your photos in a particular order (though that particular drag and drop function was finicky and frustrating).īut the dealbreaker was that it’s not web-based and, uh, didn’t actually work for me. I was willing to fork out a bit for our wedding album, and MyPublisher seemed to fit the bill. I spent ages researching photobook makers renowned for their quality and that would ship to NZ. Particularly those pesky travel pics, which I really wanted some tangible copies of.Īs a result, I’ve been on a bit of a photobooking spree, and tried a few different companies in the process. So when I finally decided it was time to do something about our wedding photos (2 years on…) I figured might as well tackle the whole shebang. I’ve got pics in Dropbox, on the laptop, on Facebook, on an SD card, on a USB stick … all over the place, really. Over the years my photo storage system – or lack thereof – has gotten OUT OF CONTROL. Much as I try, I am not a naturally organised person.
