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#1
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picture resolution
I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original
JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? Thanks, -Bill |
#2
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote: I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? You've got the wrong idea here. You don't resample your images to downsize them, you just change the inches dimensions, and let the program increase the pixel pitch accordingly. If you aren't getting more ppi at the smaller sizes, then you are doing something wrong or your photo program is ****. Recommend Photoshop Elements. Gary Eickmeier |
#3
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote:
I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? Thanks, -Bill The 72 number is applicable to the monitor, which will always display the same pixel per inch depending on the settings. Forget it. What you are looking for is the file data. For a 4x6 print 1600x1200 or higher resolution is fine. From the file size you quote sounds like you are shooting a little higher than that. Just crop to select the content you want to retain. Not familiar with PS but aim to crop to a 3:2 ratio and the print will be pretty much what you see on the monitor. Dave Cohen |
#4
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picture resolution
On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 16:23:30 -0700, Bill Bowden wrote:
I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? They should print fine, as is. Thanks, -Bill |
#5
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picture resolution
Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number
above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? You don't need to mess with the ppi at all. Just crop the pictures to the 4 x 6 aspect ratio. If you don't crop them the way you want in advance the machine at Wal-mart will crop them for you, and the result may not be what you expect. |
#6
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote:
I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? No, and please don't do that! You'd do that only for web display or E-mailing a small image. You are best off not resizing at all unless you are over 400 or so ppi. Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? PPI means little for monitor display in PS, as most default settings will show the whole image. OTOH, you might want to check "Unsampled" in Image Size in PS, and set it to a ppi such as 300; the size in inches will then appear as a more realistic number. That will also allow you to get used to pixel dimensions and allow you to, ah, size up a photo for its printing potential at high rez. -- john mcwilliams |
#7
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picture resolution
On Jul 31, 6:22 pm, John McWilliams wrote:
Bill Bowden wrote: I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? No, and please don't do that! You'd do that only for web display or E-mailing a small image. You are best off not resizing at all unless you are over 400 or so ppi. I need to resize because I want to copy and paste picture segments from different pictures into a new one. Some of the segments need to be larger, and others smaller. Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? PPI means little for monitor display in PS, as most default settings will show the whole image. OTOH, you might want to check "Unsampled" in Image Size in PS, and set it to a ppi such as 300; the size in inches will then appear as a more realistic number. That will also allow you to get used to pixel dimensions and allow you to, ah, size up a photo for its printing potential at high rez. If I set pix/inch to 400, with resample off, the size reduces to 6.5 X 4.8 inches, but the filesize is still huge at 650K. Do I really need that much resolution for the printer at Wal-Mart, or will a picture at 72 pix/inch look just as good? What are the limits of the "One Hour Photo" printers? -Bill -- john mcwilliams |
#8
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote:
On Jul 31, 6:22 pm, John McWilliams wrote: Bill Bowden wrote: I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? No, and please don't do that! You'd do that only for web display or E-mailing a small image. You are best off not resizing at all unless you are over 400 or so ppi. I need to resize because I want to copy and paste picture segments from different pictures into a new one. Some of the segments need to be larger, and others smaller. Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? PPI means little for monitor display in PS, as most default settings will show the whole image. OTOH, you might want to check "Unsampled" in Image Size in PS, and set it to a ppi such as 300; the size in inches will then appear as a more realistic number. That will also allow you to get used to pixel dimensions and allow you to, ah, size up a photo for its printing potential at high rez. If I set pix/inch to 400, with resample off, the size reduces to 6.5 X 4.8 inches, but the filesize is still huge at 650K. Do I really need that much resolution for the printer at Wal-Mart, or will a picture at 72 pix/inch look just as good? What are the limits of the "One Hour Photo" printers? No, 72 ppi will suck. One easy way is to set a crop at 4 x 6 at 300 ppi; then your chances for a good print increase. Also, set for sRGB if not already in that color space. BTW, fwiw, 650 K is a tiny size for many print jobs,tho not for 4 x 6's Good luck! -- John McWilliams |
#9
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote:
I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? Thanks, -Bill Choose the CROP tool. Set it for 6"x 4" Set the RESOLUTION to 300 ppi. (400 ppi is ok but is probably overkill). Crop the picture just the way you like it. Voila! Your image will print at exactly 4" X 6" and 300 ppi. Some commercial printers can utilize 400 ppi, and some can't. If it can't, it will resample your image to 300ppi or whatever is the maximum resolution it can handle. You will NOT be able to tell the difference between a 6x4 printed at 300ppi or 400ppi. Bob Williams Bob Williams |
#10
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picture resolution
Bill Bowden wrote in news:1185924210.534061.86490
@k79g2000hse.googlegroups.com: I want to print 4X6 photos and maintain good resolution. The original JPG files from my 'cannon power shot 460' vary around 1.2 to 2 megs. When I load these photos into photoshop, the dimensions vary from 36X27 inches to 22X16 at 72 pixels per inch. If I change the image size in photoshop to 4X6 inches and 72 pix per inch, producing a much smaller file, will I get the same resolution on the small print that I would get on a larger 36X27? Is there any advantage to adjusting the pix/inch to a higher number above 72, or will the printer at WalMart be able to use it? Thanks, -Bill Bill: the rest of the advice in this thread looks pretty good and I won't dwell on that, but I have some experience with Costco printing (not Walmart) that I'd be glad to share. Go visit your retailer and talk to the folks who run the photo print shop. Explain what you've got and what you'd like to achieve. They will be glad to help you establish a workflow that will get you picture-perfect results every time. I have found Costco's machines to be perfectly profiled and they give me spot-on color. Can't speak for Walmart, but I would expect similar, highly professional results. Good luck! |
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