Edible Printer Kit – Canon TS705A Bundle with Icing & Wafer Sheets | Watson & Webb

Regular price
£147.99
Sale price
£147.99
Regular price
£0.00
Sold out
Unit price
Quantity must be 1 or more

Print vibrant, food-safe images in minutes with the Canon TS705A Edible Printer Bundle by Watson & Webb.

Everything you need ships in one box—printer, CMYK + photo-black edible inks, 25 icing sheets, 25 wafer sheets, refillable PG-580 / CLI-581 cartridges, syringes, and a full cleaning pump kit—so you’re ready to create gorgeous cake toppers, cookies, cupcakes and edible place cards straight out of the gate.

  • Photo-quality edible prints – 9600 × 2400 dpi resolution on frosting, wafer, sugar & icing sheets.
  • Cost-effective refills – high-yield, chip-resettable cartridges mean up to 600 pages between top-ups.
  • Food-grade & EU-certified – inks produced in ISO-certified facilities for total peace of mind.
  • Easy Wi-Fi & USB setup – plug-and-print on Windows, macOS, AirPrint & mobile apps.
  • Full maintenance kit – cleaning pump & solution keep nozzles clog-free for crisp colour every time.

Why choose Watson & Webb?

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the ink really edible & safe?

Yes. All cartridges are filled with EU-approved food colourings manufactured in ISO 9001 / 22000 facilities.

Can any printer be used as an edible printer?

No. Only a brand-new, dedicated inkjet printer that has never used regular ink is safe for edible printing. Regular ink contains non‑food-grade chemicals that contaminate printheads, leading to health hazards, dull colours, and clogged cartridges.

How to make edible print cookies?

Prepare your cookie with a smooth top, apply a thin layer of icing or fondant, then place your edible image and press gently. Let it dry before serving.

How long do the cartridges last?

Roughly 600 A4 pages at 5% coverage or hundreds of cake toppers. Refill easily with our 100ml edible ink bottles.

Does this replace my office printer?

No. Never use an edible ink printer for office printing. Only new printers that haven’t used standard ink are food-safe.

Go to full site