Originally Posted by
DanK
I agree with Manfred. I don't use that printing service (I'm on the wrong side of the pond), but the main problem is likely to be how you prepare the file for printing, not the printing service. Printing at home won't solve any of those problems. It will simply confront you with the additional tasks entailed in learning to properly control printing. These are not trivial at first.
I'd forget about doing anything until you have your monitor calibrated.
When you get to the point where your files are properly prepared, then there will be tradeoffs in deciding whether to print yourself. Manfred is right that it is usually cheaper to use a lab, but these days, you can get superb prints from very inexpensive dye-based printers, and the cost per print is not hugely higher than a lab. Red River paper has estimates by type of paper and printer, but unfortunately only in dollars.