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Small Pics into Poster SizeHere's another little tip from Photoshop Guru Scott Kelby. I have no idea why it works, neither does he, but it does!
It seems that when you increase the size of an image in 10% steps it doesn't seem to soften or blur the image. Weird, huh?! With Resample Image Turned On to Bicubic Go to Image > Document Size > Percent >110% Repeat until you get up to the final size you want. Scott suggests making this into a PS action to make repetitions easier. Enjoy. (Thanks to johndec for pointing out my resample omission.) Last edited by SoCal Steve on Mon Feb 21, 2005 10:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Small Pics into Poster Size
He also mentions that you have to switch the "Resample Image" checkbox to Bicubic Smoother. Most important....
This method has been around for some time but it should be done in LAB mode on the lightness channel for the best results. It is also not recommended for pics with straight lines
Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
LAB (in PS) is a 3 channel mode developed to achieve consistency amongst various devices including monitors and printers. When you convert to LAB through mode-LAB on the menu bar you are presented with a channel representing lightness, a channel for green thro’ red and another for blue thro’yellow. Basically what it gives you is greater control over luminosity and colour independent of each other giving more refined editing possibilities. Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
I used this method from 2000 through 2004 with the D1 which had a 2.7Mp sensor - that’s what I love about the D70, a bigger sensor.
But even with the D70 I have had to increase pic sizes to over 100Mb and to do this I use pxl SmartScale - very fast over the 10% increase method. Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
The bicubic sharper/smoother option is only in PSCS I think. The sharper option is for downsizing usually while the smoother is for upsizing.
There's another tool for doing this sort of thing called Genuine Fractals (http://www.lizardtech.com/products/gf/) - I haven't tried it but it looks interesting. Cheers, Stephen
Stephen - I use both PixelScale and Genuine Fractals in PS7 and PSCS. The only problem with Genuine Fractals is that it save the image as a .stn file separate to the original file. You then have to open this file through PS whereas PixelScale makes the conversion in one step within PS. Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
Thanks Chris - I'll make sure I give PixelScale a go when I need to do something like this. Do you notice any other differences between the 2? I would assume the output quality is very similar? Cheers, Stephen
Stephen - I don’t think you would be able to pick the difference - they are both excellent and as I stated earlier in this thread I often have to take images up to 100Mb+ with no problems
Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
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