Originally Posted by
DanK
I think people are using the term differently. Most often, when discussing photographic prints, people use "archival quality" to refer to how long the print will last without deteriorating (colors fading, OBAs decomposing and creating yellowish areas, etc.). AFAIK, the term is not generally used to refer to the quality of the initial print. For example, the prints produced by my Canon Pro-100 would not be considered "archival" by most people (including me) because it uses dye-based inks, which fade more quickly than pigment inks. However, hot off the press, they are every bit as good--and some would say slightly better--than many archival pigment-ink prints.
So if you are content with images that will fade in several decades, you can forget about "archival" printing. The dye-sublimation prints I have received from Bay Photo (one of Smugmug's higher-end labs, though I don't use it through Smugmug) have been very good.