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Hi' all.
Could someone please tell me how to resize photographs. My friend was sent a few photos via email and they are all large raging from 576KB & some a bit smaller but not much, and she asked me how to resize them. I'm not very familiar with photos and I have only enlarged them in the past I think, it's been a while since I did it. Also I am not very computer savvy just know a little bit more than my friend. She didn't have any software so I downloaded "Irfanview" on her computer and she wanted 6x4 inches but no matter what I did I couldn't get 6x4inches it kept jumping back to a different number, I managed to get 7x5 but not sure how I did it now. My friend has the starter program of Adobe photo shop and found 6x4 but it would not print on her Hewlett Packard. I had a practise on my computer with Grandview as I have a photo in my pictures that is 576KB but I don't understand the pixel measurements which is 1188x1848 for that size. I either ended up with a tiny photo or a large one. I have Canon software as well but again the pixels and cm have me confused, not sure what the equivalent is and even if I did it jumps back to what it wants. I would appreciate any advice and sorry to sound so dumb. Regards, Cassie |
#2
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"Cassie" wrote in message
news ![]() Hi' all. Could someone please tell me how to resize photographs. My friend was sent a few photos via email and they are all large raging from 576KB & some a bit smaller but not much, and she asked me how to resize them. I'm not very familiar with photos and I have only enlarged them in the past I think, it's been a while since I did it. Also I am not very computer savvy just know a little bit more than my friend. She didn't have any software so I downloaded "Irfanview" on her computer and she wanted 6x4 inches but no matter what I did I couldn't get 6x4inches it kept jumping back to a different number, I managed to get 7x5 but not sure how I did it now. My friend has the starter program of Adobe photo shop and found 6x4 but it would not print on her Hewlett Packard. I had a practise on my computer with Grandview as I have a photo in my pictures that is 576KB but I don't understand the pixel measurements which is 1188x1848 for that size. I either ended up with a tiny photo or a large one. I have Canon software as well but again the pixels and cm have me confused, not sure what the equivalent is and even if I did it jumps back to what it wants. I would appreciate any advice and sorry to sound so dumb. Regards, Cassie Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G |
#3
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Thanks Roy, I had a look at the link you posted, there is a lot of reading
but looks as though it may help I hope. Many thanks, Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message news ![]() "Cassie" wrote in message news ![]() Hi' all. Could someone please tell me how to resize photographs. My friend was sent a few photos via email and they are all large raging from 576KB & some a bit smaller but not much, and she asked me how to resize them. I'm not very familiar with photos and I have only enlarged them in the past I think, it's been a while since I did it. Also I am not very computer savvy just know a little bit more than my friend. She didn't have any software so I downloaded "Irfanview" on her computer and she wanted 6x4 inches but no matter what I did I couldn't get 6x4inches it kept jumping back to a different number, I managed to get 7x5 but not sure how I did it now. My friend has the starter program of Adobe photo shop and found 6x4 but it would not print on her Hewlett Packard. I had a practise on my computer with Grandview as I have a photo in my pictures that is 576KB but I don't understand the pixel measurements which is 1188x1848 for that size. I either ended up with a tiny photo or a large one. I have Canon software as well but again the pixels and cm have me confused, not sure what the equivalent is and even if I did it jumps back to what it wants. I would appreciate any advice and sorry to sound so dumb. Regards, Cassie Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G |
#4
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"Cassie" wrote in
news ![]() Hi' all. Could someone please tell me how to resize photographs. My friend was sent a few photos via email and they are all large raging from 576KB & some a bit smaller but not much, and she asked me how to resize them. I'm not very familiar with photos and I have only enlarged them in the past I think, it's been a while since I did it. Also I am not very computer savvy just know a little bit more than my friend. She didn't have any software so I downloaded "Irfanview" on her computer and she wanted 6x4 inches but no matter what I did I couldn't get 6x4inches it kept jumping back to a different number, I managed to get 7x5 but not sure how I did it now. My friend has the starter program of Adobe photo shop and found 6x4 but it would not print on her Hewlett Packard. I had a practise on my computer with Grandview as I have a photo in my pictures that is 576KB but I don't understand the pixel measurements which is 1188x1848 for that size. I either ended up with a tiny photo or a large one. I have Canon software as well but again the pixels and cm have me confused, not sure what the equivalent is and even if I did it jumps back to what it wants. I would appreciate any advice and sorry to sound so dumb. Regards, Cassie 80-85 pixels is "apporximately" one-inch (depending upon your computer screen resolution). |
#5
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"Cassie" wrote in message
... Thanks Roy, I had a look at the link you posted, there is a lot of reading but looks as though it may help I hope. Many thanks, Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message news ![]() "Cassie" wrote in message Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G Hi again. I should add that I have just found a Canon provided program on my machine, called Arc Soft Photo Studio 5.5. and also Irfanview. Irfanview is more of a picture viewer than an editing program. I have looked at both of those and there is no way of resizing without adding or removing pixels. That is a bad thing to do, because it will cause damage to the picture which will almost certainly have had its pixels changed already. What you need to do is change how closely packed the pixels are. If you want the picture to print smaller then you want to pack the pixels closer together, but you do not want to add or remove pixels. This is done by changing the Pixel per Inch (PPI) figures. That can be done very easily in real Digital Photo Editing Programs like Photoshop Elements, but I don't know about Photo Shop De Lux or whatever your program is. There is a Free Editing Program called Picassa which can be downloaded, but again I have no experience of it.. It is possible that the Printer will have a setting somewhere to "Scale" the image, or to set the Final Print Size, and the printer driver will do this alteration for you without inventing or losing pixels. By the way your image is actually a 2.2 Mb picture (1188 x 1848 = 2,195424). It is only 576 Kb because of compression being applied when it is closed to its saved size. It should still print well at 6 inches x 4 inches. On these groups a 2.2Mb image is considered small, if not very small. A 2 Mega Pixel Camera will produce a 6Mb image, a10 Mp Camera will produce a 30 Mb Image. Best of luck, Roy G |
#6
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Thanks again Roy,
I'll have a look at Picassa, this is so confusing especially when one is not very good at photography. I really just want to help my friend who has so many of her grandchildren's photos sent to her but when I opened them up they filled the entire screen and they print only print out part of the huge picture. I'll have to do some reading. I have Arcsoft software too so maybe that would change the size. Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message ... "Cassie" wrote in message ... Thanks Roy, I had a look at the link you posted, there is a lot of reading but looks as though it may help I hope. Many thanks, Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message news ![]() "Cassie" wrote in message Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G Hi again. I should add that I have just found a Canon provided program on my machine, called Arc Soft Photo Studio 5.5. and also Irfanview. Irfanview is more of a picture viewer than an editing program. I have looked at both of those and there is no way of resizing without adding or removing pixels. That is a bad thing to do, because it will cause damage to the picture which will almost certainly have had its pixels changed already. What you need to do is change how closely packed the pixels are. If you want the picture to print smaller then you want to pack the pixels closer together, but you do not want to add or remove pixels. This is done by changing the Pixel per Inch (PPI) figures. That can be done very easily in real Digital Photo Editing Programs like Photoshop Elements, but I don't know about Photo Shop De Lux or whatever your program is. There is a Free Editing Program called Picassa which can be downloaded, but again I have no experience of it.. It is possible that the Printer will have a setting somewhere to "Scale" the image, or to set the Final Print Size, and the printer driver will do this alteration for you without inventing or losing pixels. By the way your image is actually a 2.2 Mb picture (1188 x 1848 = 2,195424). It is only 576 Kb because of compression being applied when it is closed to its saved size. It should still print well at 6 inches x 4 inches. On these groups a 2.2Mb image is considered small, if not very small. A 2 Mega Pixel Camera will produce a 6Mb image, a10 Mp Camera will produce a 30 Mb Image. Best of luck, Roy G |
#7
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On Tue, 01 Aug 2006 22:43:32 GMT, "Cassie"
wrote: Hi' all. Could someone please tell me how to resize photographs. My friend was sent a few photos via email and they are all large raging from 576KB & some a bit smaller but not much, and she asked me how to resize them. I'm not very familiar with photos and I have only enlarged them in the past I think, it's been a while since I did it. Also I am not very computer savvy just know a little bit more than my friend. She didn't have any software so I downloaded "Irfanview" on her computer and she wanted 6x4 inches but no matter what I did I couldn't get 6x4inches it kept jumping back to a different number, I managed to get 7x5 but not sure how I did it now. My friend has the starter program of Adobe photo shop and found 6x4 but it would not print on her Hewlett Packard. I had a practise on my computer with Grandview as I have a photo in my pictures that is 576KB but I don't understand the pixel measurements which is 1188x1848 for that size. I either ended up with a tiny photo or a large one. I have Canon software as well but again the pixels and cm have me confused, not sure what the equivalent is and even if I did it jumps back to what it wants. I would appreciate any advice and sorry to sound so dumb. Regards, Cassie In Irfanview, go to image Resize/Resample, choose inches and make your change. The picture probably won't come out 6X4 because the proportions are not correct on the original shot. If you uncheck "Preserve aspect ratio", then you can force the size to whatever you want, but there will be some distortion. The only other way to make the aspect ratio correct would be to crop out part of the picture. For that particular picture the distortion may not be too bad, give it a try. Use Edit to undo the change if you don't like what you get, or else make a copy of the original picture with a different name and just work with the copy. 4X6 ration comes out to .666..., the 1184X1848 comes out to 0.642857143, so there isn't too much difference. Any other software will have the same problem, the original picture does not fit nicely into 4X6 format, but can be forced if you want it to. |
#8
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Me again, I opened my Arcsoft software and the photo I have that is 576KB,
and just printed it out without changing anything and it prints in 6 x 4, soooo! could I put this software on my friends computer even though she doesn't have a canon she has Hewlett Packard, sorry to be a pest. Cassie. "Cassie" wrote in message ... Thanks again Roy, I'll have a look at Picassa, this is so confusing especially when one is not very good at photography. I really just want to help my friend who has so many of her grandchildren's photos sent to her but when I opened them up they filled the entire screen and they print only print out part of the huge picture. I'll have to do some reading. I have Arcsoft software too so maybe that would change the size. Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message ... "Cassie" wrote in message ... Thanks Roy, I had a look at the link you posted, there is a lot of reading but looks as though it may help I hope. Many thanks, Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message news ![]() Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G Hi again. I should add that I have just found a Canon provided program on my machine, called Arc Soft Photo Studio 5.5. and also Irfanview. Irfanview is more of a picture viewer than an editing program. I have looked at both of those and there is no way of resizing without adding or removing pixels. That is a bad thing to do, because it will cause damage to the picture which will almost certainly have had its pixels changed already. What you need to do is change how closely packed the pixels are. If you want the picture to print smaller then you want to pack the pixels closer together, but you do not want to add or remove pixels. This is done by changing the Pixel per Inch (PPI) figures. That can be done very easily in real Digital Photo Editing Programs like Photoshop Elements, but I don't know about Photo Shop De Lux or whatever your program is. There is a Free Editing Program called Picassa which can be downloaded, but again I have no experience of it.. It is possible that the Printer will have a setting somewhere to "Scale" the image, or to set the Final Print Size, and the printer driver will do this alteration for you without inventing or losing pixels. By the way your image is actually a 2.2 Mb picture (1188 x 1848 = 2,195424). It is only 576 Kb because of compression being applied when it is closed to its saved size. It should still print well at 6 inches x 4 inches. On these groups a 2.2Mb image is considered small, if not very small. A 2 Mega Pixel Camera will produce a 6Mb image, a10 Mp Camera will produce a 30 Mb Image. Best of luck, Roy G |
#9
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You can put that software on your friends computer with no problems at all.
Or at least you shouldn't have any problems. That program is not related to the printer at all, it is just a photo editing program. I got it free with my Canon printer as well and I use it a fair bit actually since it's pretty simple to use. However, I was given a cheap polariod digital camera a while ago, and it was also bundled with the arcsoft software, just an earlier version. "Cassie" wrote in message ... Me again, I opened my Arcsoft software and the photo I have that is 576KB, and just printed it out without changing anything and it prints in 6 x 4, soooo! could I put this software on my friends computer even though she doesn't have a canon she has Hewlett Packard, sorry to be a pest. Cassie. "Cassie" wrote in message ... Thanks again Roy, I'll have a look at Picassa, this is so confusing especially when one is not very good at photography. I really just want to help my friend who has so many of her grandchildren's photos sent to her but when I opened them up they filled the entire screen and they print only print out part of the huge picture. I'll have to do some reading. I have Arcsoft software too so maybe that would change the size. Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message ... "Cassie" wrote in message ... Thanks Roy, I had a look at the link you posted, there is a lot of reading but looks as though it may help I hope. Many thanks, Cassie. "Roy G" wrote in message news ![]() Have a look at www.scantips.com Pixels and things are well explained there, or try reading the Help Files in one of your Photo Programs. This is easy, but writing a quick set of instructions for a photo program I am not familiar with, would be rather difficult. Roy G Hi again. I should add that I have just found a Canon provided program on my machine, called Arc Soft Photo Studio 5.5. and also Irfanview. Irfanview is more of a picture viewer than an editing program. I have looked at both of those and there is no way of resizing without adding or removing pixels. That is a bad thing to do, because it will cause damage to the picture which will almost certainly have had its pixels changed already. What you need to do is change how closely packed the pixels are. If you want the picture to print smaller then you want to pack the pixels closer together, but you do not want to add or remove pixels. This is done by changing the Pixel per Inch (PPI) figures. That can be done very easily in real Digital Photo Editing Programs like Photoshop Elements, but I don't know about Photo Shop De Lux or whatever your program is. There is a Free Editing Program called Picassa which can be downloaded, but again I have no experience of it.. It is possible that the Printer will have a setting somewhere to "Scale" the image, or to set the Final Print Size, and the printer driver will do this alteration for you without inventing or losing pixels. By the way your image is actually a 2.2 Mb picture (1188 x 1848 = 2,195424). It is only 576 Kb because of compression being applied when it is closed to its saved size. It should still print well at 6 inches x 4 inches. On these groups a 2.2Mb image is considered small, if not very small. A 2 Mega Pixel Camera will produce a 6Mb image, a10 Mp Camera will produce a 30 Mb Image. Best of luck, Roy G |
#10
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On Wed, 02 Aug 2006 00:29:24 GMT, Roy G wrote:
I should add that I have just found a Canon provided program on my machine, called Arc Soft Photo Studio 5.5. and also Irfanview. Irfanview is more of a picture viewer than an editing program. I have looked at both of those and there is no way of resizing without adding or removing pixels. That is a bad thing to do, because it will cause damage to the picture which will almost certainly have had its pixels changed already. I took the question to be more about how to get the pictures properly printed on 4" x 6" paper than to actually do image resizing. And so . . . When you select File - Print from IrfanView's menu, you get a Print Preview window that allows you to specify the print size without making any changes to the image file. Set the "Units" to cm or inches, then select the Custom radio button. Make sure that the Aspect Ratio box is checked, and then play with values for Width and Height or the image might undergo some bizarre stretching. Beneath the preview window IrfanView shows the "Resulting image size on paper" in both cm and inches. Unless the image size already has a 4x6 aspect ratio you'll either have uneven white margins or no margins, but with some truncation of the image. It's probably easier to work with copies of the images, where you'd be free to crop, rotate, spindle and mutilate. ![]() |
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