by Chris & Marry
Which printer actually handles 12x12 scrapbook pages without cropping your layouts, bleeding your colors, or chewing up your cardstock? That's the question every serious crafter needs answered before spending hundreds of dollars on a machine. After testing printers across every price range, the Epson EcoTank Photo ET-8550 stands out as the best all-around pick for scrapbookers who want wide-format output, stunning color, and long-term cost savings rolled into one machine.
Printing 12x12 pages is not like printing a standard letter or even a 4x6 photo. You need a printer that supports at minimum 13-inch-wide media, handles cardstock thickness, and produces photo-quality color across the full page — edge to edge. Most home inkjet printers top out at 8.5 inches. To hit that 12x12 scrapbook sweet spot, you need a wide-format photo printer. Fortunately, in 2026 there are several excellent options across different budgets, from the budget-friendly Canon PIXMA TS9521Ca to the professional Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-300. If you're also working on other creative projects, check out our roundup of the best printers for Cricut Maker projects for more inspiration.
This guide covers the top 7 printers for 12x12 scrapbook pages in 2026. You'll find detailed reviews, a clear buying guide, and answers to the most common questions crafters ask. Whether you're a weekend hobbyist or a serious scrapbooking enthusiast, this list has the right printer for your setup. For even more options in the art and craft printing space, browse our full art and craft printer category. If you want to understand a key ink difference before buying, our deep dive on dye ink vs pigment ink is essential reading for scrapbookers.
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The Canon PIXMA TS9521Ca is the most accessible entry point for crafters who want wide-format printing without a professional price tag. This all-in-one handles printing, copying, and scanning — giving you a full creative hub for your scrapbooking workspace. Setup is genuinely fast. You're up and running in a few minutes, and the wireless connection makes it easy to print directly from your phone, tablet, or laptop.
Where this printer earns its place on this list is in its 5-ink individual cartridge system. When one color runs dry, you only swap that cartridge — no wasting a half-full combo pack. Print speeds are solid at approximately 15 black and 10 color images per minute, which matters when you're printing a full batch of scrapbook pages in one sitting. It supports media up to 12x12 inches, making it a genuine option for standard scrapbook layouts.
It won't match professional photo quality head-to-head against the Epson XP-15000 or the ET-8550, but for everyday scrapbook printing on a budget, the TS9521Ca delivers reliable, colorful results. The 1-year limited warranty gives you peace of mind for a first printer purchase.
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The Epson XP-15000 is a powerhouse for scrapbook photographers and creative crafters who want borderless wide-format printing up to 13x19 inches. That extra print width means your 12x12 layouts print with full bleed — no white borders, no clipping, no compromises. The 6-color Claria Photo HD ink system includes dedicated red and gray inks, which dramatically widens the color gamut (the range of colors a printer can reproduce) compared to standard 4-color printers.
Print quality is genuinely stunning on photo paper and scrapbook cardstock. Colors are vivid and accurate, and the dedicated gray ink gives black-and-white scrapbook pages an almost silver gelatin quality. Sound pressure runs at about 49 dB during operation — quieter than many wide-format printers. The XP-15000 requires Epson genuine cartridges, so don't try to use third-party inks — Epson is clear that doing so voids the warranty.
This printer earns its reputation as one of the best wide-format inkjet values available. If you want near-professional photo output at a consumer price, and your scrapbooking involves lots of photos and color-rich designs, the XP-15000 is a standout choice in 2026.
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If you want the best print quality money can buy for scrapbooking, the Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-300 is the machine professionals reach for. It prints up to 13x19 inches with a professional inkjet system designed for fine art and photo reproduction. The 3.0-inch LCD screen gives you direct control right at the printer, and the included Professional Print & Layout software (PP&L) means you get gallery-level output management on day one.
The Nozzle Recovery System and Skew Correction are practical features that matter for scrapbookers. Nozzle recovery minimizes clogging during downtime — you won't ruin a 12x12 layout because the printer sat unused for a week. Skew Correction keeps your pages feeding straight, which is critical for borderless full-bleed scrapbook printing. The compact footprint for a wide-format printer makes it easier to fit into a craft room setup.
This is not a budget printer. The PRO-300 is an investment. But if you treat your scrapbooking as a serious creative craft and want results that look like they came from a professional print shop, this delivers. Mobile printing is fully supported, and the wireless connectivity is reliable and fast.
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The Canon PIXMA PRO-200S combines an 8-color dye-based ink system with a 3.0-inch color LCD monitor, producing prints that pop with vivid, saturated color — exactly what you want for photo-heavy scrapbook pages. Dye-based ink (as opposed to pigment ink) produces brighter, more vivid colors, though it's slightly less archival than pigment. For scrapbooks kept in albums and away from direct sunlight, this trade-off is well worth it.
The PRO-200S handles borderless printing from 3.5x3.5 inches all the way up to 13x19 inches, so your 12x12 scrapbook layouts print edge-to-edge without borders. Print speed is impressive for a professional machine — a bordered A3+ page in just 90 seconds. For high-volume scrapbooking sessions where you're printing dozens of pages, that speed adds up to real time savings. Wireless connectivity lets you print from your phone, tablet, or computer without fumbling with cables.
If your scrapbooks are vibrant and colorful — think bold patterns, bright photos, vivid backgrounds — the PRO-200S delivers a color punch that few printers at this level can match. The 8-ink system gives you color depth that really shows on glossy scrapbook paper and photo stock.
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The Epson EcoTank Photo ET-8550 is our top overall pick for scrapbookers, and it's not a close call. This is a cartridge-free wide-format all-in-one that prints, scans, and copies — and it does all three beautifully. Instead of buying cartridges, you fill the integrated ink tanks from bottles. The math is simple: you're printing 4x6 photos for about 4 cents each instead of the 40 cents you'd pay with traditional cartridges. For a scrapbooker printing hundreds of pages, that's a massive saving over time.
Print quality is lab-grade. The 6-color Claria ET Premium ink system produces sharp text and rich, accurate photo colors across a wide gamut. Borderless printing goes up to 13x19 inches, so your 12x12 scrapbook layouts come out perfectly. A 4x6 photo prints in just 15 seconds — the fastest on this list. The 4.3-inch color touchscreen makes navigation intuitive, and the machine supports cardstock, CD/DVDs, and specialty media up to 1.3mm thick. That media versatility is a genuine advantage for crafters working with embossed paper, thick cardstock, and specialty scrapbook stock.
The ET-8550 also includes auto 2-sided printing (duplex printing — printing on both sides automatically), which adds functionality for craft projects beyond scrapbooking. Add Ethernet connectivity on top of wireless, and you have a fully networked printer that works reliably in any craft room or home studio setup. According to Wikipedia's overview of inkjet printing technology, tank-based systems like EcoTank represent the most significant cost-reduction innovation in consumer inkjet printing in the past decade — and the ET-8550 is the best expression of that technology for photo and creative printing.
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The Epson SureColor P700 is the archival choice on this list — the printer you buy when you want your scrapbook pages to last decades without fading. The all-new UltraChrome PRO10 ink with Violet produces an exceptionally wide color gamut, including a dedicated violet ink channel that adds richness to blues, purples, and skin tones that other 10-color systems simply can't match. If you're creating scrapbooks meant to be treasured heirlooms, the P700's pigment-based ink delivers fade resistance that dye-based systems can't compete with.
The P700 eliminates one of the most frustrating quirks of professional photo printers — the need to switch between Photo Black and Matte Black ink depending on paper type. The P700 has dedicated nozzles for both, so there's no switching, no wasted ink, no delay. The new 10-channel MicroPiezo AMC printhead (a precision printing mechanism that fires ink droplets at extremely accurate sizes and positions) delivers speed and consistency that shows in every print.
This is a serious printer for a serious crafter. The P700 is priced at the top of this list. But if you value color accuracy, archival permanence, and professional output — and your scrapbooks are something you're creating for the long term — the investment is justified. Check our guide on best photo printers for Mac if you're on Apple hardware and want pairing recommendations.
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The Canon PIXMA iX6820 rounds out this list as the most straightforward wide-format wireless option. It supports AirPrint (Apple's built-in wireless printing system) and Google Cloud Print, so printing from your iPhone, iPad, or Mac is completely seamless. The iX6820 uses Canon's Fine Print Head Technology (Full-photolithography Inkjet Nozzle Engineering) — a precise nozzle system that delivers sharp detail and clean color in every print.
This printer supports media up to 13 inches wide, comfortably handling your 12x12 scrapbook pages. It's positioned more as a business and home office printer, but crafters who want straightforward wide-format wireless printing without the complexity of professional-grade machines find the iX6820 a reliable and easy-to-use option. It runs on Windows 7 through 8.1 and Mac OS X 10.6.8 through 10.9 — note that this is an older driver stack, so verify compatibility with your current operating system before purchasing.
The iX6820 is not the most feature-rich printer on this list, and it lacks the 6-color ink depth of the Epson options. But for simplicity, wireless reliability, and wide-format support at a lower price point, it's a practical pick for crafters who just want a printer that works.
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Before you buy, make sure you understand exactly what you need. Here are the four biggest factors that determine whether a printer is right for your scrapbooking workflow.
Standard home inkjet printers max out at 8.5 inches wide. A 12x12 scrapbook page needs a printer that supports at least 13-inch-wide media. Every printer on this list supports 13-inch-wide output. Do not buy a printer that tops out at 8.5 or 11 inches for scrapbooking — you'll be disappointed on day one. Look for "wide-format" in the specs, and confirm the maximum media width before purchasing.
The number of ink colors and the ink delivery system directly affect both print quality and how much you spend over time. Here's what to know:
If you're printing high volumes of scrapbook pages, the Epson ET-8550's tank system saves you significant money. If you print occasionally but want excellent quality, a 6-color cartridge printer like the XP-15000 is a smart balance.
Scrapbooking involves more media types than standard document printing. You need a printer that handles:
The Epson ET-8550 handles media up to 1.3mm thick, which covers most scrapbook cardstock. The Canon PRO-300 and PRO-200S are designed for fine art media, so they handle thick and delicate stock reliably. If you use a lot of heavy or specialty paper, check the printer's maximum media thickness specification before buying. Our guide to the best printers for 110lb cardstock goes deeper on this topic.
This is a decision worth making deliberately. Dye ink (used in the Canon PRO-200S and Epson XP-15000) produces brighter, more vivid colors but is less resistant to UV fading over time. Pigment ink (used in the Epson P700 and imagePROGRAF PRO-300) is more archival and fade-resistant but can appear slightly less vivid on certain glossy papers. For scrapbooks stored in albums away from light, dye ink is perfectly fine. For scrapbooks displayed or meant to last 50+ years, pigment ink is the better choice.
No. Standard home inkjet printers max out at 8.5-inch-wide media, which means a 12x12 page will be clipped on both sides. You need a wide-format printer that supports at least 13-inch-wide media. Every printer on this list handles 13 inches, which gives you the full 12x12 page with room to spare for borderless printing. If you're shopping outside this list, always check the maximum media width specification first.
The best paper choice depends on your design. For photo-heavy scrapbook pages, use glossy or semi-gloss photo paper in 12x12 size. For more textured, layered designs, heavyweight matte cardstock (65–110 lb) delivers a more traditional scrapbook feel. For the richest color output, pair glossy paper with a 6-color or higher ink system. Specialty scrapbook paper designed for inkjet printing is available from most craft suppliers and online retailers.
It depends on how long you want your scrapbook pages to last and where they'll be stored. Dye ink produces more vivid, saturated colors and is ideal for scrapbooks kept in albums away from direct light. Pigment ink is more archival — prints can last 50–100 years under proper storage conditions — making it better for heirloom scrapbooks meant to be passed down. The Epson SureColor P700 uses pigment ink for maximum longevity. The Canon PRO-200S uses dye ink for maximum color vibrancy.
With traditional cartridge printers, expect to pay roughly 30–80 cents per full-color 12x12 page depending on ink coverage and the printer model. With the Epson EcoTank ET-8550's tank system, that cost drops dramatically — Epson estimates about 4 cents per 4x6 photo, so a 12x12 page with heavy coverage runs roughly 15–25 cents. Over hundreds of scrapbook pages, the EcoTank system pays for itself several times over compared to cartridge-based alternatives.
Yes — all of the wide-format printers on this list support borderless printing. The Epson XP-15000, ET-8550, Canon PRO-200S, imagePROGRAF PRO-300, and SureColor P700 all print borderless up to 13x19 inches, giving your 12x12 layouts a full edge-to-edge print with no white borders. The Canon iX6820 and TS9521Ca also support borderless output up to their maximum media widths. Always confirm the borderless size settings in your print driver before printing.
The Canon PIXMA TS9521Ca is the most accessible entry point on this list. It supports 12x12 media, offers all-in-one print/copy/scan functionality, and uses a 5-color individual ink system so you only replace cartridges as they run out. For budget-conscious crafters who don't need professional photo quality, it delivers reliable, colorful results. If you're open to spending a bit more for dramatically lower running costs, the Epson EcoTank ET-8550 is a smarter long-term investment despite its higher upfront price.
About Chris & Marry
Chris and Mary are a couple with a shared background in graphic design and print production who have spent years working with printers across creative and professional contexts — from art printing and photo output to label production and professional document work. Their combined experience evaluating printer performance, color accuracy, and paper handling across inkjet and laser platforms gives them a practical, hands-on perspective on what makes a printer worth buying. At ShopChrisAndMary, they cover printer reviews, buying guides, and recommendations for artists, photographers, and professional users.
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