Welcome to The Pixel Depot!
The Pixel Depot specializes in high quality images on a variety of media, including
standard prints, canvas, and mouse pads. Theres an option for every budget.
We offer custom services as well. If you've got a photo you particularly
love, let us make it a treasured item by turning it into a piece of art. For something a little different, take a look at our selection of vinyl window
decals. With both pet-themed and railroad-themed images, you might just find
something that takes your breath away. Railroads. Planes. Pets. Lighthouses.
Landscapes. And more.
Photo editing services are also available. Sometimes the difference between a mediocre
photo and a great one is a little touch-up. Let us do the work. Then, once your
photo is perfect, put it on a canvas, or a mouse pad.
But why use us instead of someone else, like Snapfish or VistaPrint? Two words: Customer
Service. To the large photo sites, you're just a number. At The Pixel Depot,
you're one of our family of clients, and we want your photo to come out perfect.
While the big photo sites have automated tools that crop your photo and adjust
the color without your input, at The Pixel Depot you know you have a real person
on the other end who wants the final product to be as special as you do, and we'll
work with you to make sure it comes out just right.
The Pixel Depot uses the same output devices as Snapfish. Owned by Hewlett
Packard, Snapfish uses HP printing presses. So does the Pixel Depot. These
printing presses use oil-based ink in the printing process—just like
traditional high-quality commercial printing—rather than toner. What does that
mean? With ink, the color becomes part of the finished product, soaking into the
media. With toner, the color sits on top of the medium, just like a color
photocopy. These toner-based printing presses are subject to "banding" just like
a color photocopier or printer. Banding makes your picture look like it was printed as a bunch
of stripes. Do you really want your treasured memory to look
like a series of stripes? Neither do we, and that's why we use ink-based
presses.