The Best Portable Photo Printers For 2020

The Best Portable Photo Printers For 2020
Instant and portable printers let you get your favourite photos off Instagram and back into a physical print.

Almost every one of us now carries an amazing digital camera around in our pockets every day - but most of those photos never end up anywhere other than Instagram.

Portable or instant printers aim to change that. These handy, pocket-sized devices will let you take your best phone photos and print them out wherever you are, while throwing on effects, filters, and other fun additions in the process.

If you want something a little more retro, you can also buy a camera that prints photos as you shoot them, just like an old-fashioned Polaroid. Take a look at our round-up of the best instant cameras to see if any take your fancy.

Instax Mini Link

Instax Mini Link
  • $99.99
The Instax Mini Link is the latest portable printer from Fujifilm. It costs £109.99/$99.99, and you can get it from Fujifilm, Amazon and more.

It uses Fujifilm's Instax Mini film, which costs just under £1/$1 per print, with the value improving the more you buy.

The Mini Link looks great, with funky colour options and a young and fresh feel.

It connects to your phone through the Mini Link app and Bluetooth, and also supports Fujifilm X Series cameras. It can't connect to social media networks however, so you can only print photos from your device.

From the app you can access your image library and choose frames and options including split prints (separating one photo into two prints) and collages.

You can edit photos within the app, with colour filters and dials to change the brightness, contrast and saturation.

The printer has a speed of around 12 seconds per print, supports continuous printing and can print up to 100 photos on a single charge.

Photos come out clear, crisp and vibrant on the Mini film, and after printing there’s a handy button to get a second copy instantly.

Fun options include a 'match test' that prints out a photo with a compatibility score between two people, and the ‘party print’ mode that allows users to add photos from up to five phones to create one Instax print.

You can even use the printer as a remote control for your smartphone camera, tilting the printer back and forth to zoom in and out - though it's a little laggy and occasionally doesn't work at all.

HP Sprocket 200

HP Sprocket 200
  • $129.99
The HP Sprocket 200 uses Zink (Zero Ink) paper, 2x3in in size and sticky-backed. A pack of 10 is provided in the box, and thereafter it costs roughly £10/$10 per pack via Amazon, though you can save money by buying bigger packs.

The Sprocket couldn't be easier to set up and use, pairing with your phone over Bluetooth. This is the only way to send prints to the Sprocket, though up to three users can share photos with a single Sprocket at once.

There's a free mobile app that hooks up to Instagram, Facebook, Google Photos and your smartphone gallery, though we found it would miss some photos this way. You can also send snaps stored elsewhere to the app using the Share menu.

With the Sprocket app, you can rotate or zoom in closer on particular parts of an image. You can also access editing options such as brightness and contrast adjustments, filters, borders, stickers and freeform text or doodles.

The Sprocket takes around 40 seconds to print each snap. The prints look good for an instant printer, but colours are not entirely accurate, and not as vibrant as you might hope. The loss of detail is also noticeable, but for small 'fun' prints the quality is good enough.

There's an AI element called Reveal, which embeds some extra nuggets of information into the image, such as videos, maps and animations, and can show you photos taken on the same day from Google Street View, Wikipedia and more - though we couldn't get Reveal to work with any of our prints.

Instax Share SP-3

Instax Share SP-3
  • $169.99
Fujifilm's Instax Share SP-3 is available from Amazon, or you can buy it in a bundle with 20 shots. When the photo paper runs out, current Amazon pricing is under £1/$1 per print.

There are cheaper instant printers. However, what we particularly like about the Instax Share SP-3 is the format: it's currently the only dedicated portable printer that uses square prints.

Printing from your smartphone with the Instax Share printer is easy - you simply download the free app from Google Play or the Apple App Store, choose an image from your photo gallery or social media, add a template and edit as required, then hit print.

As you'd expect there are also various templates that let you add captions with a seasonal message (such as happy birthday) or the time and date, weather or even an Instagram or Facebook status.

Despite the larger prints the Instax Share is still portable at 312g, and comes with a rechargeable battery that should be good for around 160 shots when fully charged, and you can top it up with the included Micro-USB cable. LEDs at the front let you see at a glance when you're running low on power or paper.

If you prefer the classic mini format, the Instax Share SP-2 offers similar functionality, but prints in the smaller Instax Mini format - though the more recent Instax Mini Link is probably the better choice.

Kodak Smile Instant

Kodak Smile Instant
  • $99.99
The Kodak Smile printer is a simple bit of kit, but it gets the job done. The design is similar to that of the HP Sprocket, and actually almost identical in size, but you get more colour options here with Blue, Red, White, Green and Black. As with the Sprocket it's a sleek device that is rectangular in shape with rounded corners.

Like the Sprocket it uses Zink prints - they aren't the highest quality, but they're a great way to get your favourite photos off your phone and into a real print or sticker. The Kodak fares well on print quality, with fairly true-to-life colours, but smaller details are lost. For scenic shots and portraits it does the job.

The Smile app (iOS and Android) has a decent array of editing options, from exposure adjustment to frames and stickers, and it lets you pull photos from your phone itself or off your social media. You can use the app to embed a video into prints, which you can scan using your phone to watch back.

You might notice that Kodak also makes a Smile Instant Camera, which doubles as a printer for the same price. That might make the camera model seem like better value, but bear in mind that it only prints photos transferred over MicroSD, rather than wirelessly, and has more limited editing options. If your focus is printing from your phone, the dedicated Smile printer is a better bet.

Polaroid Mint

Polaroid Mint
  • $129.99
Polaroid's Mint Pocket Printer is similarly priced to the HP Sprocket at £119.99/$129.99, but is currently less from Amazon (in black, blue, white, yellow, or red). It also uses the cheaper Zink paper - you can get a pack of 50 2x3in sheets from Amazon for £24.99/$22.

The Mint also has a variety of customisation options. You can edit images - cropping, zooming, saturation, contrast, and more - before applying filters, borders, text, and stickers.

The Mint is smaller and more easily portable than most rivals at 25x76x130mm and 204g, and can handle up to 50 prints before needing to be charged again.

If you'd rather have the prints without the printer, Polaroid also offers a remote printing service, Super Snaps - you just upload your photos and the company will ship retro-style Polaroid prints directly to you.

Kodak Smile Instant Camera

Kodak Smile Instant Camera
  • $99.99
Kodak’s Smile Instant Print Digital Camera is half instant printer, half instant camera. It can (in theory) print photos you’ve already taken using a different camera and then transferred onto a MicroSD card, but it also has a built-in camera that means you can use it to capture photos on the device itself and print those too. 

This may sound great, but the downside is that we found it doesn't do either thing as well as its rivals.

It’s really tricky to rate the Kodak Smile Instant Print Digital Camera. On the one hand, it’s a compact device that has almost every feature we could ask for in an instant camera/printer hybrid. A decent screen, a microSD card slot, a flash, good battery life, speedy printing, editing capabilities and an affordable price tag.

On the other hand, the editing capabilities are limited, the microSD card slot seems to have trouble finding images not taken on the Smile itself, and the prints are low quality when they arrive.

It's available to buy for £99.99/$99.99 from Amazon.

Lifeprint Harry Potter

Lifeprint Harry Potter
  • $149.99
The Harry Potter Photo and Video Printer from Lifeprint lets you print your videos. Let’s break that down.

It’s a compact Bluetooth printer that uses Zink zero ink paper and works with the Lifeprint app (Android and iOS), which also doubles as a social media sharing hub and community.

In fact, the app is where most of the magic happens.

You simply choose a video that you want to print, connect to Bluetooth and send it off. What prints is a photo - simply scan that with the Hyperphoto Viewer on the app and watch your video come to life on the screen. In theory.

The Harry Potter Lifeprint printer is fantastic – when it works. We wanted to love it.

In our experience, the app was slow and crashed a couple times (though it could have been the phone we used, which was an HTC 10 on Android). When we printed our videos, the scanner didn't always recognise the images, so we were not able to see them come to life as effortlessly as the tutorials showed.

The prints themselves aren't incredibly high quality either, and have a bluish tinge. This is common to Zink paper though, so it would not be fair to fault the printer here.

The printer in itself looks great, though, especially with the Harry Potter branding. You can even add a metallic Hogwarts House crest (provided) to truly show off your dedication to the franchise.
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About Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera

Hey, I'm Perera! I will try to give you technology reviews(mobile,gadgets,smart watch & other technology things), Automobiles, News and entertainment for built up your knowledge.
The Best Portable Photo Printers For 2020 The Best Portable Photo Printers For 2020 Reviewed by Wanni Arachchige Udara Madusanka Perera on October 24, 2020 Rating: 5

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