I tried an 'AI' sticker printer — and it proves tech companies must stop forcing AI into everything

Liene printer with Amanda Caswell's printed stickers
(Image credit: Future/AmandaCaswell/brightened with Gemini)

Portable photo printers have one obvious appeal: they make digital memories feel physical again. There's just something so fun about holding an image in your hand, especially in a world where thousands of photos disappear into a camera roll. The ability to peel off the back and stick it somewhere you’ll actually see it is fun for kids and adults alike.

That is the promise of the Liene Pearl N200 Pro Portable AI Photo Printer ($119), a compact photo printer designed to turn phone pictures into 2x3-inch sticker prints. On paper, it sounds like exactly the kind of gadget my family would love. It is small, easy to set up and built around the kind of instant creativity that works well for kids, scrapbooks, bullet journals, party favors and quick DIY projects.

After using it, I can say this much: the printer itself is genuinely fun. But, the AI got the images wrong every time and frankly, the printer is so good, the AI felt unnecessary.

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Liene’s Pearl N200 Pro is a compact portable photo printer that turns phone pictures into 2x3 sticker prints using dye-sublimation technology. In my testing, it was easy to set up, quick to pair over Bluetooth and fun to use for spontaneous prints, journaling and family craft projects. The app includes frames, filters, background removal, watermarks, timestamps and AI portrait styles, though the AI results did not always look like the original person. I liked the creative possibilities more than the AI gimmick. It’s best for casual sticker printing, scrapbooking and DIY projects, not realistic AI portraits.

Setup was surprisingly easy

The best thing about the Liene Pearl N200 Pro is how intuitive it is to set up. In seconds, I downloaded the app, inserted the ink cartridge and loaded the sticker paper. I did not need to wrestle with complicated menus or printer settings just to get started.

When it comes to printers, a product like this lives or dies on whether people can use it casually. If I have to read a manual for 20 minutes, my kids (and myself!) have already moved on. But with the Pearl N200 Pro, the process felt approachable: connect the printer, choose a photo, make a few edits and print.

It also helps that the printer comes with a generous starter supply of ink and sticker paper. That made the experience feel more complete right out of the box instead of making me immediately worry about buying refills.

For families, crafters and people who like turning photos into something more tangible, that ease of use is a major win.

The prints were flawless

The Liene Pearl N200 Pro is so much more than a basic photo printer. It's an “all-in-one” craft tool for projects, bullet journaling, scrapbooking, home decor, workshops and family projects. Everyone from my preschooler to my middle schooler and even my husband found uses for the stickers. Lunch boxes, computer decor, water bottle bling and even fun reminders.

Everyone from my preschooler to my middle schooler and even my husband found uses for the stickers. Lunch boxes, computer decor, water bottle bling and even fun reminders.

This is where the Pearl N200 Pro feels most useful. It is not trying to replace a full-size printer or a professional photo lab. It is trying to make small, instant, creative prints feel easy. On that front, it mostly succeeds.

I could see this working well for kids’ projects, classroom crafts, birthday parties, family memory books and anyone who wants to bring digital photos into a physical space without dealing with a large printer.

The AI feature was mediocre

The Pearl N200 Pro includes features to transform your photos into different looks, but the results often come out looking incredibly generic. As someone accustomed to the high-quality outputs of dedicated tools like Nano Banana and ChatGPT Images 2, the printer's built-in image generation falls way short.

AI portraits only work if they preserve the part of the photo people actually care about: the person

The app offers plenty of creative variety. You can use customizable templates to turn yourself into a cartoon, a sketch, or even face-swap yourself into an astronaut.

The issue is that AI portraits only work if they preserve the part of the photo people actually care about: the person. If I upload a picture of a family member, I don’t want a generic avatar with a similar hair color; I want it to actually look like them. The app struggles mightily with this identity preservation. At one point, I uploaded an image of my very blonde son, only for the AI to give him dark brown hair. A second attempt got much closer, but just know that it rarely hits the mark on the first try.

Ultimately, these AI features feel forced. For anyone considering this printer, you are much better off designing your custom graphics in Nano Banana or ChatGPT Images, saving them to your phone, and uploading them normally. Bypassing the app's native AI completely lets the hardware do what it actually does best: printing great little photos and stickers.

The sticker paper also has one major flaw

The other issue I ran into was the adhesive. The prints are designed to work as stickers, which is a huge part of the appeal. But in my experience, the stickers were not very sticky and did not attach well to most surfaces. That limits the usefulness of the product because the sticker function is not just a bonus feature. It is the point.

If I am printing little photos for a journal or scrapbook, weak adhesion may not be a dealbreaker because I can always add tape or glue. But if I want to stick them to a notebook, folder, gift bag or craft surface, I expect them to stay put. That was disappointing, especially because the prints themselves are fun to make.

That said, be sure you stick with Liene products only when using this printer. There are others available on Amazon, but when I asked Liene whether users should buy only the company’s own paper, the brand strongly recommends sticking with official Liene paper, suggesting that the printer is part of a calibrated craft ecosystem and that lower-quality alternatives could have uneven coatings or adhesive residue that may damage the thermal print head.

That is worth noting because refills are part of the long-term cost of owning any mini photo printer. If you buy this, you are not just buying the device. You are buying into the Liene paper and cartridge system, too. That is not unusual for photo printers, but it is something shoppers should understand before purchasing.

Final thoughts

Despite my issues with the AI and sticker adhesion, I do think the Liene Pearl N200 Pro is a worthwhile purchase. This is a good fit for people who want a simple, portable way to print tiny photos for crafts. It is especially appealing for families, scrapbookers, bullet journal fans, teachers, workshop leaders and creators who want to turn phone photos into quick physical prints. The prints themselves are flawless and laminated beautifully, so you don't even need to remove the sticky backing.

Overall, the Liene Pearl N200 Pro is a fun little printer. It is easy to set up, simple to use and genuinely enjoyable for creative projects. Just forget about the AI entirely.


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Amanda Caswell
AI Editor

Amanda Caswell is the AI Editor at Tom's Guide and one of today’s leading voices in AI and technology.

A celebrated contributor to various news outlets, her sharp insights and relatable storytelling have earned her a loyal readership. Amanda’s work has been recognized with prestigious honors, including outstanding contribution to media.

Known for her ability to bring clarity to even the most complex topics, Amanda seamlessly blends innovation and creativity, inspiring readers to embrace the power of AI and emerging technologies.

As a certified prompt engineer, she continues to push the boundaries of how humans and AI can work together.

Beyond her journalism career, Amanda is a long-distance runner and mom of three. She lives in New Jersey.

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