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Resolution: The Peanut Butter Analogy. When you scan an image or take a digital picture you are “collecting” a batch of pixels. The mega pixel rating.

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Presentation on theme: "Resolution: The Peanut Butter Analogy. When you scan an image or take a digital picture you are “collecting” a batch of pixels. The mega pixel rating."— Presentation transcript:

1 Resolution: The Peanut Butter Analogy

2 When you scan an image or take a digital picture you are “collecting” a batch of pixels. The mega pixel rating of your camera or your scanner’s sensitivity will determine how many pixels of information you can collect. In digital terms, the image doesn’t really have a fixed dimension but it has a volume that’s defined in pixels per inch.

3 The same volume of pixels can be spread thickly so that the image has more resolution but is smaller in length and width. For example: 4 x 5 inches at 300 pixels per inch We can spread those pixels more thinly so that the image has less resolution but is larger in length and width. For example: 8 x 10 inches at 150 pixels per inch or Let’s say we start with a 5 Mega Pixel image. (That’s 5 million pixels)

4 OK…enough of the peanut butter! The point is that you collect information about a picture when you digitize it through scanning or digital photography. Here’s what’s really important; at the point of digitizing an image you are collecting the best information possible. No matter what you do with it in Photoshop you’ll never have more accurate information (pixels) than at the moment of digitization. What’s the Point?

5 Sources for digitized images Digital Cameras capture 1.0 to 10 Mega Pixels. You’re the photographer Scanners have a wide range of resolution depending on quality 72-1200 ppi is typical. Drum scanners capture up to 64,000 ppi Images copied off the web are at a very low resolution of 72 ppi You can purchase digitized images from Photo sites like Corbis.com Resolution typically tops out at 300 ppi

6 What Resolution Do I need? How you plan on using the image dictates how much resolution you need! Web uses 72 ppi Laser color printing 150-200 ppi High end 4 color printing 300 ppi Excessive resolution crates large files and does not improve print quality! Here’s the basic rule of thumb:

7 PPI vs DPI Pixels per inch refers to scanner, camera, and monitor resolution. Dots per inch refers to the physical output detail of a printer. If you know your printer output resolution you can calculate what image resolution would result in the best print. Here’s the formula: Output dpi divided by 3=optimum input ppi For example: 600 dpi/3=200 ppi

8 Dealing with Resolution in Photoshop You’ve opened an image in Photoshop…your first stop in should always be Image>Image Size! What’s your image resolution and dimensions? Without resample selected your image will be like the peanut butter example. A change in resolution will result in a proportional change to width and height. The overall file size won’t change. With resample selected your image will resample. Pixels will be added if you choose a resolution or dimension that’s larger than the original image. Caution: more pixels doesn’t mean a bad picture will look better! File size

9 The concept of resolution, resampling, ppi and dpi are essential to understanding and working with Photoshop at a professional level. The best way to learn this is to do it. Open a variety of images in Photoshop and then go directly to the Image>Image Size box and see what happens. Again, what’s the Point?


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