Google Photos printing service add new sizes and delivery options

466
Google Photos printing service add new sizes and delivery options

Google’s photo printing subscription service has received mixed feedback since it launched in 2019. The premium service left AI to pick ten photos to print and ship to subscribers monthly, leaving users little choice on the matter. Since then, however, Google has expanded its photo printing options, and at this point, it’s growing the service further by growing the sizes you’ll choose between. More importantly, you’ll also keep yourself safe while preserving memories by letting Google deliver those photos to your door.

For photo prints, you’ll now select larger sizes of 11×14, 12×18, 16×20, and 20×30 additionally to the prevailing three. You’re returning more choices for the larger Canvas prints with six new sizes to settle on from on top of the first three. Those sizes include 8×10, 16×16, 20×30, 24×36, 30×40, and 36×36, enough to fill your wall to your heart’s content.

Google now also offers the choice to deliver those prints to you, just in case you don’t want to risk going out. That said, it does accompany the disadvantage of getting to attend for the prints to arrive. Same-day pick-up remains available at CVS, Walgreens, and Walmart, but those are limited to the 4×6, 5×7, or 8×10 sizes only, a minimum of within the US. Japan gets a 3.5×5 option from 7-Eleven.

Also See:  Pixel 6 Pro price leak includes a pre-order promo in Germany

The old printing options are still available, of course. Photo Books allow you to compile themed photos into one physical album starting at $9.99. Unlike the monthly subscription service, you have some semblance of control over what photos to get rid of and which photos go where. Of course, you may have to pick a canopy design and a title to travel alongside the gathering.

The premium printing service remains available only within the US and still costs $6.99 a month. Of course, you’ll edit the gathering that Google suggests, but its AI will still detect photos supported their date metadata, though you’ve got the choice to skip months if you would like.

Also See:  Pixel 6a renders appear familiar, but many questions remain unexplained