Liene 4x6 Instant Photo Printer (2022) Review | PCMag

2022-05-21 15:01:55 By : Mr. Wilson zhou

A slightly pricey—but nifty—smartphone companion

The cordless 2022 edition of the Liene Instant Photo Printer produces good-looking 4-by-6-inch snapshots relatively quickly, making it a good fit for families seeking a take-along printer.

After the impressive debut of the Liene Instant Photo Printer last year, what does the company do for an encore? While Liene, which sells through Amazon, still offers its original 4-by-6-inch dye-sublimation printer for $136.99, the new $159.99 model sports a rechargeable battery. That distinction—the ability to operate without an outside power source—makes this revised photo printer much more adept at working with handheld smartphones and tablets. Like its predecessor, the 2022 edition prints well, but it costs more to buy and to operate than our current favorite 4-by-6-inch dye-sub printer, the Canon Selphy CP1300 Wireless Compact, which was introduced in 2019. That's enough to keep the Liene from an Editors' Choice nod, but not by much. 

At 3.4 by 8.1 by 4.9 inches and weighing 2.5 pounds, the new Liene Instant Photo Printer (also known as the Amber M200) is the same size as its predecessor but weighs about a third of a pound more. Among its several dye-sub competitors—as opposed to zero-ink (or "Zink") photo printers, which I'll get to a minute—the Canon Selphy CP1300 is slightly smaller and about half a pound lighter; the HP Sprocket Studio is a couple of inches bigger but the same weight as the Canon; and 2017's Kodak Photo Printer Dock is an inch or so smaller in all directions but two pounds heavier than the battery-powered Liene.

Then there are the numerous Zink pocket photo printers, including a couple of HP devices such as the Sprocket Select and Sprocket Second Edition (PCMag Best of Year winners in 2019 and 2018 respectively) and products from Canon, LifePrint, and others. Typically, Zink machines churn out smaller images than their dye-sub counterparts, with most print pics measuring about 2 by 3 inches. (The Sprocket Second Edition's are 2.3 by 3.4 inches.)

We haven't come close to exhausting the list of portable photo printers, with many more variants and exceptions available. A recent Editors' Choice award winner, the Kodak Mini 3 Retro, is a dye-sublimation device that prints 3-by-3-inch square images.

Zero-ink machines produce photos in a single pass through the printer, using special paper permeated with bits of ink released by the application of heat. Dye-sub printers take four passes—laying down cyan, magenta, and yellow inks plus a clear coat. The last helps colors pop and protects photos from dust, scratches, and fingerprints.

A look at the Liene printer reveals a meager control panel up front, made up of a power button and an array of status LEDs (Power, Battery, Service, and Wi-Fi). Though you can use the device with your laptop or desktop PC, like its predecessor, the new Liene is optimized for printing from your Android or iOS phone or tablet with the Instant Photo Printer mobile app (more about that in a moment). According to the company, a fully charged battery is good for about 40 prints. That's versus 54 for the Selphy and 35 to 40 for the Sprocket Second Edition.

Not all pocket photo printers come with batteries, however. To take HP's Sprocket Studio outside, for instance, you must spring for a $90 external power bank good for (according to HP) about 40 prints. Not only does this add significantly to the printer's cost, but it also means carrying an additional, relatively heavy gadget around with you.

Ink cartridges slip into a compartment on the printer's right edge. Each cartridge of waxy ink prints 40 photos. The detachable paper tray holds up to 20 sheets of 4-by-6-inch glossy photo paper, and a slot on the back facilitates the back-and-forth of the paper's four passes through the printer. When packing the unit for travel, you can detach the paper tray and store it on top of the printer; a magnet holds it in place.

On the back of the printer, you'll find a USB Type-C port and an AC adapter port. Besides USB, connectivity options include Wi-Fi and a peer-to-peer wireless hotspot. 

While you can connect a laptop or desktop via USB cable, you're more likely to use the Liene Instant Photo Printer with Wi-Fi. Acting as a hotspot, the unit lets you connect up to five computing devices (Android, iOS, macOS, or Windows) to the printer simultaneously. You can connect several more through your Wi-Fi network router, but I doubt many scenarios would require more than five.

Available for both Android and iOS, the Liene Photo Printer app lets you edit and apply simple filters to your photos, as well as adding text, drop shadows, and borders. You can also print directly from your favorite cloud site, your phone's photo gallery, or from most PC programs (USB cable not included).

As these little photo printers go, the Liene is quick, averaging about one minute per image. I ran my tests over a USB-C connection from our Intel Core i5 PC testbed using Windows 10 Pro. I repeated the tests over a wireless connection to my Samsung Galaxy Note smartphone and got very similar results both in terms of speed and print quality.

The Canon Selphy was roughly as fast, but the HP Sprocket Studio took twice as long (2 minutes and 5 seconds). As for Zink photo printers, even though their prints are usually smaller than 4 by 6 inches, they normally take longer than their dye-sublimation rivals. HP's Sprocket Select, for example, churns out a 2.3-by-3.4-inch image in a minute and a quarter, about as fast as Lifeprint's 2-by-3-inch Zink printer. (Lifeprint's 3-by-4.5-inch model takes a minute and a half.)

Speed is not dye-sub photo printers' only leg up on their Zink counterparts. Output quality is better, too. Just like the 2021 model, the 2022 Liene Instant Photo Printer produced brilliant, accurate colors with excellent detail. Where Zink media feels thin and flimsy, Liene's 4-by-6-inch glossy sheets (like most other dye-sub media) feel like the premium photo papers they are.

To be sure, these images aren't a match for the quality you'll get from a full-fledged, five- or six-ink desktop consumer photo printer from Canon or Epson. As portable photo printers go, though, the Liene prints well and at a respectable clip.

While writing this review, I found three 2022 Instant Photo Printer bundles. The basic $159.99 package comes with the printer, an AC adapter, and enough paper and ink for 20 photos. An extra $6 buys you the printer and enough consumables to produce 60 photos, and for $169 the top bundle gives you 100 prints. When it comes time to buy replacement consumables, a package of 40 4-by-6-inch sheets and accompanying ink sells for $19.99, or about 50 cents per print.

That's about 8 cents more per photo than Liene consumables cost in October of last year (though I did find a two-pack bundle for $38, or 47.5 cents per print). The Selphy CP1300 is considerably cheaper to use at 35 cents per print, and the HP Sprocket Studio splits the difference at 44 cents. Again, those numbers include both ink and photo paper, but even so they're more expensive than a photo-optimized inkjet such as the five-ink Canon Pixma TR8620.

Even though they're smaller, Zink photos cost more. The Lifeprint 3x4.5 and the HP Sprocket Select use packs of their special ink-free paper that sells for $1.25 and 65 cents per sheet, respectively. The Liene's 50 cents per photo isn't bad, though the Selphy's 15-cent savings could add up if you print a lot of pics—print 100 photos per month, and the CP1300 will save you $180 each year.

As we said about its batteryless predecessor, the 2022 Liene Instant Photo Printer is a no-frills device that churns out good-looking snapshots from your phone, your PC, or the cloud. It's a snap to set up and use, and it supports multiple connectivity options. Its consumables are kind of pricey, though, so you'll want to keep an eye out for sales. But otherwise there's plenty to like about the Liene for both personal and family photo printing, especially if you need to do it away from a power outlet.

The cordless 2022 edition of the Liene Instant Photo Printer produces good-looking 4-by-6-inch snapshots relatively quickly, making it a good fit for families seeking a take-along printer.

Sign up for Lab Report to get the latest reviews and top product advice delivered right to your inbox.

This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.

Your subscription has been confirmed. Keep an eye on your inbox!

I focus on printer and scanner technology and reviews. I have been writing about computer technology since well before the advent of the internet. I have authored or co-authored 20 books—including titles in the popular Bible, Secrets, and For Dummies series—on digital design and desktop publishing software applications. My published expertise in those areas includes Adobe Acrobat, Adobe Photoshop, and QuarkXPress, as well as prepress imaging technology. (Over my long career, though, I have covered many aspects of IT.)

In addition to writing hundreds of articles for PCMag, over the years I have also written for many other computer and business publications, among them Computer Shopper, Digital Trends, MacUser, PC World, The Wirecutter, and Windows Magazine. I also served as the Printers and Scanners Expert at About.com (now Lifewire).

The SOHO, SMB, and enterprise printer and scanner markets

Printer and scanner technology (and accompanying software)

Consumer-grade and pro-grade photo printing

When testing products, whenever possible and/or logical, I use our current testbed, an Intel Core i5-equipped PC running Windows 10 Professional. But I don’t, of course, use the same machine for writing and editing photos and graphics.

Instead, I use a Dell XPS 17, a 17-inch laptop with an 11th Generation Core i7 processor with 32GB of RAM and running Windows 11 Pro. When working in my home office, I connect the laptop to a 49-inch monitor, which allows me to view three windows at once comfortably. I traded in three 24-inch monitors (all from different manufacturers) for that single panel, Dell’s UltraSharp 49 Curved Monitor (U4919DW), in early 2021, and I haven’t looked back. (When you work the hours of a freelance journalist, you need all the help you can get to increase comfort and productivity.)

My smartphone is a Samsung Galaxy Note 9 running the latest version of Android. (Yes, it’s time to look for a 5G model, but this Note still works great…)

I write in Microsoft Word 365 and organize and save research in OneNote. OneDrive is my cloud service of choice, though I also use Dropbox and Google Drive. I create and edit artwork for my stories with Adobe Photoshop, which is overkill in many cases but an indulgence I’m not ready to give up. (I also don't want to forget how to use it!)

For email and other personal information management, I use Microsoft Outlook on my laptop (primarily because I’ve used it forever), but Gmail on my phone. And finally, after working all day, many evenings I like to settle in for an hour or two of gaming. As I write this, I’m deep into Ubisoft’s Anno 1800—and it plays well and looks beautiful on my 17-inch XPS and on the 49-inch curved monitor.

My first computer (after a year or so on a dedicated word processor) was an off-brand AT clone with two 5.25-inch floppy disk drives. The monitor was a big and heavy monochrome CRT. Moving to the XT with a 10MB hard drive was wonderful, but Windows was oh-so-sluggish and far from stable enough—yet!—to run any serious software. Everything was still pretty much text-based.

Alas, I don’t recall my first cell phone, though I do remember it costing so much to use that few people distributed their mobile numbers freely.

PCMag.com is a leading authority on technology, delivering Labs-based, independent reviews of the latest products and services. Our expert industry analysis and practical solutions help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

© 1996-2022 Ziff Davis. PCMag Digital Group

PCMag, PCMag.com and PC Magazine are among the federally registered trademarks of Ziff Davis and may not be used by third parties without explicit permission. The display of third-party trademarks and trade names on this site does not necessarily indicate any affiliation or the endorsement of PCMag. If you click an affiliate link and buy a product or service, we may be paid a fee by that merchant.