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72 resolutionI had the lovely Bindii round to visit this afternoon, and she discovered (thank gawd) that my images once downloaded from my camera to my pc, are being stored at 72 resolution instead of 300. My pc goes through the process of initially importing the images etc through Adobe Photoshop Album Starter Edition 3.0 which I think came with my Canon camera software, and then I open them in Photoshop to sort etc.
Is there some setting I need to change, or can change to ensure that the images are saved at 300 please???????? If my waffling doesnt make sense, ask Bindii, she knows what I mean
I understand what you mean. However, I don't think you need to worry unless you plan to print the images. For displaying images on the screen, it is the actual pixels that are displayed and the resolution is ignored. Even when you print the images, you can tell the printing software to ignore the resolution.
Yeah, that's pretty much it for displayed images.
Are you taking photos in RAW or JPEG? Are you doing any conversion before you load them into photoshop? It is possible a default setting along the way is changing the default to 72 dpi. I checked all my Nikon images and JPEG images are 300x300 dpi straight from the camera. I'm not sure if RAW images actually have a resolution.
I'm presently using JPEG, but I dont do anything to the images before taking them off the camera. Its going to be frustrating if I have to remember to resize every image I want to print, before going ahead and printing them.
And it probably also explained why my images were printing out looking a little soft on focus. Bindii tried her images on my pc, and they were saved at 300 dpi so I'm a little puzzled as to what is going wrong.
I think Mr Dear may have the answer about the reason you get 72 dpi.
Printing at 72 dpi instead of 300 dpi just means the image will be larger, rather than softer. e.g. a 1200 x 900 pixel image would result in a 16.67 x 12.5 inch print @ 72 dpi, but a 4 x 3 inch print @ 300 dpi. In the 72 dpi print, the pixels woudl be noticeable.
My canon is a 400D. And I'm still not sure I understand. So if my images are being printed out at 72 dpi that's ok? I was printing 8 x 10. The images looked nice and sharp on the monitor, but once printed werent sharp at all.
I find this all very confusing.
I think you find it confusing because it is.
In terms of the image file, the resolution is somewhat meaningless. It is basically an instruction that can (bun not necessarily) be used by a printer to determine how large to make the image. I know when I print an image from my software, I can tell the software to completely ignore the resolution information. I hope I haven't confused you more. Most image manipulation software will allow you to change the resolution without affecting the image in any other way - which reinforces the idea that it isn't all that important. You don't want to print the images at 72 dpi - as this would make them very large and of poor quality - but as I said, you should be able to change them to 300 dpi in Photoshop before you print them.
ATJ thank you for that. I hope you dont mind me asking more questions but I need to have it clear in my head so I know exactly what it all means.
So, if I import images off my camera onto my pc and they are automatically saved at 72 dpi, will it affect the image if before printing it, I save it at 300 dpi?
Hi Sunnylass,
You could always try transfering files directly from your camera/card to a folder as oposed to using any importing software. I do it this way as it tends to be quicker and I can decide more readily where to store the images. There will also be alteration to the files this way. Regards Colin
Thank you Colin, I have to admit I've deleted the software that seemed to automatically start the whole process off.
What I'm wondering though is, if I have taken an image at the highest resolution I can on my camera, still a JPEG though, and then once its been moved from my camera to my pc, and its been stored by my pc at 72 dpi, has that image automatically lost resolution?
Resolution and DPI are different things yet they are related
Resolution is how many pixels/dots an image is made up of eg 1000 x 640 DPI is how that information is represented in size e.g 72 Dots/pixels Per Inch. How many Dots/Pixels Per Inch your monitor supports will be different to how many Dots/pixels Per Inch your printer will support.
Ok, please be patient with me here, but this is still not helping answer my questions. I have my camera set on the highest quality size (JPEG), which is producing beautiful images. Now, when I take them off my camera and put them onto my pc, do the images lose any quality, resolution etc? As for printing them, I am going to be taking them to labs etc, so do I need to do anything to prep them before I get them printed out? I'm assuming that if I'm taking one of my images that shows the dpi being 72% isnt necessarily going to be a good result.
No, you have not lost any resolution. DPI is meaningless in this context. All you need to do when you get them printed, is to tell them how big you want the prints. The DPI will be pixels divided by print size. Hope this helps! Cheers What's another word for "thesaurus"?
Is it not the case that:
- DPI is mainly relevant when discussing dimensions in cm rather than pixels? if i want a image to be 20x20cm at 300dpi, it will contain a lot more pixels than 20x20cm image at 72dpi. - DPI is largely irrelevant unless you are printing, as screens have their own DPI settings... - The most important thing is to preserve your pixels body: nikon d200, d70s, f4s, f601.
lens:nikon 35-70mm f2.8, 70-300mm f4-5.6, 10.5mm f2.8, 20mm f2.8, 28mm f2.8, 50mm f1.8. flash: nikon sb600, sunpak 383 (x1), sunpak 555 (x4), pocketwizard plus II (x4) jamesdwade.com dishonourclothing.com
With the risk of confusing you even further, it would have been printed out at the resolution of the printer. e.g. my Epson is 240 dpi. The image resolution MAY be used by the printing software to convert the pixels to something the printer can handle, but I'm sure I have printed images where the image resolution made no difference at all.
I don't think you can say your photography sucks... maybe just your understanding of a very confusing aspect of digital photography sucks.
Wow ATJ I just had a look at your marine set ups! I have two tanks, but one has bettas and the other has a combination of goldfish, platties and my gorgeous little bristlenose catfish Bobby!
I do find this whole printing thing confusing, I have to confess. Why can't it just be easier.
Pixels basically equals dots. There is technically a difference, but I think we can safely ignore that for now
The blobs of colour that make up an image tend to be called pixels when they are on a screen and dots when they are on a piece of paper. If you have an image that is 720 pixels wide by 360 pixels high then when you print it out at 72 dots per inch (dpi) it will print out 10 inches wide and 5 inches high on the paper. Alternatively, you can tell the software that you want the paper image to be 5" by 2.5" in which case it will print out at 144 DPI. or if you want it to be 20" X 10" it will print out at 36 DPI. If your printer can only cope with 72DPI, it will do a horrible job of both, as it will be simply unable to print the first (it will probably print every second dot), and it will print two dots for every one sent for the second, making a blocky print. This is just an example. Most new printers can print at higher resolution, and are fairly smart at handling other resolutions. The printer resolution is determined by the size of the ink droplet it can produce. One possible cause of softness on the printed image may be your paper. If your ink is bleeding on the paper, it will cause a level of blurring. Try changinging your paper HTH Greg
It's easy to be good... when there is nothing else to do
I actually put the two images on my flash card and took them to a lab. I hadnt checked the dpi etc on the images before I took them to the lab, so I'm assuming the information was set at 72 dpi, arrrrrghhhhh I'm going to go and bang my head against a wall for a few minutes and see if that helps me get this information sorted out in my head.
This has been a very interesting thread to read!
This is something I struggle with too (among many other things) and the explanations have been very helpful. I like Mr Darcy's blob explanation, that is the kind of terminology I can relate to Elena Elena
give the lab a call and see what res they printed it at. that will solve all your problems. if i was a betting man, i'd put money on that they printed at their printers native DPI setting, disregarding any DPI instructions that were on the file. body: nikon d200, d70s, f4s, f601.
lens:nikon 35-70mm f2.8, 70-300mm f4-5.6, 10.5mm f2.8, 20mm f2.8, 28mm f2.8, 50mm f1.8. flash: nikon sb600, sunpak 383 (x1), sunpak 555 (x4), pocketwizard plus II (x4) jamesdwade.com dishonourclothing.com
Thanks James I will do that. I didnt however save the image at any settings before taking the flash card to the lab, so in fairness to the lab, its probably more my own fault than theirs anyway.
I just need to get a firm understanding on how to make sure I don't make the same mistakes in the future is all.
Sunnylass
72 ppi is not the native resolution of your camera...but your monitor. The pictures you sent to the lab are probably high resolution unless you changed the resolution to 72ppi in a program like Photoshop. Most confusion comes from the fact that monitors can only display 72/110 ppi but they don't change the captured resolution set in the camera. Regards
Matt. K
open photoshop go preferences>Units & Rulers>Print Resolution.....
set to your desired amount and restart photoshop...... Cheers ....bp....
Difference between a good street photographer and a great street photographer.... Removing objects that do not belong... happy for the comments, but .....Please DO NOT edit my image..... http://bigpix.smugmug.com Forever changing
sunnylass
What is your work flow? Do you simply download and then open in Photoshop or are you using other programs before you open in Photoshop? Photohop will not downrez an image unless you tell it to...or have some kind of preset enabled. Some programs, like Noiseware, will downrez without prompting...but not Photoshop...unless I'm missing something here. Regards
Matt. K
They were initially being opened in Adobe Photoshop album starter or something, that I hadnt asked it to do. I think that came with my camera software. Anyhoo, I've deleted that. I've yet to try and see what happens now, but I'll have to do a test run cause I have work on tomorrow!
I just did some testing printing an image and the "resolution" made no difference at all.
I am using Paint Shop Pro 9 and printed to an Epson Stylus Photo 830. I started with an image that was 3028 x 1893 pixels. It had a default resolution of 300x300 dots per inch (78 pixels/centimetre). I printed it to photo quality paper to produce an image that was 200 x 125 mm in size. I then converted the image to 72 x 72 dpi and printed it again to the same size. There is absolutely no difference in the quality of the printed images.
Yeah this drove me nuts... I can't see why images downloaded straight from Sunnylasses camera are arriving in photoshop at 72 dpi... I thought perhaps that the program that was opening the files (photoshop album starter) was doing it.. but when it opened an image of mine that I had saved for printing on a usb stick it opened at 300 dpi..
I have a 20D.. and for the most part shoot raw... when I open my images in photoshop the dpi is always high (around 500 something I think.. which I then sometimes set to 300 before printing depending on what the lab prefers)... I was always under the impression that 72dpi was for screen viewing only... but it seems that maybe that isnt the case????... so now you have two confused ....but not helpless.... females... its gonna be a pain in the ass if she has to reset all her images before she goes to print them I would think... surely there is a way to stop this from happening.. The last thing I want to do is hurt you... but it's still on the list...
If you are using Adobe Camera Raw to open your image there is a box where you specify the ppi to open it at. This defaults to 240 I think, but you can, for example make this 72 ppi. If you then save this as your default, all future images will have 72 there and unless you change it that's how they'll open in Photoshop. See the screen shot below. The first circled bit shows the image will open at 240ppi. If you click that it opens the second dialog shown here where you could change the 240 to 72 (again circled) and all future images would also open 72 ppi
Peter
Disclaimer: I know nothing about anything. *** smugmug galleries: http://www.stubbsy.smugmug.com ***
The "DPI" setting within the file is advisory. Digital images are just pixels, they have no inherent physical size. An image editor might use the "DPI" setting to calculate rulers in inches or cm. This doesn't affect the image itself.
If you take an image to the lab they will print it at the size you choose - the advisory "DPI" setting within the file is irrelevant. Mark
I've read through all the responses and I'm still feeling like a bimbo. I have to get some more prints done today, or tomorrow, and I'm still freaking a little, worrying whether or not if I have to increase the dpi on the image before I save it to my flashcard and take it to the lab.
Ring the lab Teela... see what they want and go with that for now.. The last thing I want to do is hurt you... but it's still on the list...
As above, the "DPI" setting is irrelevant when printing. Mark
As above, DPI is meaningless in this context. If you don't trust all this advice - try it for yourself - make two copies of an image, set one to 10 DPI, and one to 1000 DPI (that should be enough to see a difference if there is one) and get the lab to print them both at the same size. Check the prints carefully to see if there is a difference. Please report your results! Cheers What's another word for "thesaurus"?
Chris
-------------------------------- I started my life with nothing and I’ve still got most of it left
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