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UNDER CONSTRUCTION They say you want some resolution.. So you thought that file size was confusing... Wait until you get into a discussion about resolution. Did you ever get an email from a client asking for a 300 dpi image? What does that mean? Here's how it typically goes, "Hey John, we saw this great image on your web site. We'd like to use it in an article in our magazine. Can you send us a 300 dpi version of it?" If it is early in the morning and the above question is followed by the typical, "oh, by the way, we have no budget, but we'll send you a copy of the magazine" I will probably just say, "sure," and send them a 300 dpi version that will be just what they asked for, but nothing like what they wanted. If I'm in a good mood and it looks like they may actually have a budget I will ask them for more information. First question might be what is the usage and the budget. But this isn't a business discussion here, so we'll jump to the technical question... "300 dpi at what print size?" is the big question that needs to be asked. 300 dpi on its own doesn't mean all that much. Here are some sample images of your's truly. One of them is 300 dpi. Another is 72 dpi. And the other one is 1 dpi. Can you tell the difference?
Probably not (or at least not without looking at the filenames). Basically we have three images that are 400 pixels wide by 465 pixels tall. On the web the resolution setting for them is meaningless. They display one pixel to one pixel. Where the difference comes in is in the printing. What would happen if I sent the 300 dpi version of the above image to the client? It would be just what they asked for (300 dpi), but nothing like they wanted. It would print at about 1.3x1.5 inches, not the full double-page spread that it should be (OK, maybe they did want a tiny picture of me). Anway, here is what happens if we bring the 72dpi and 300 dpi versions of the image into a page layout application like InDesign. The file tagged at 72 dpi comes in at around 5.5x6.5 inches at 72 dpi. The 300 dpi version comes in, as stated above, at 1.3x1.5 at 300 dpi--much smaller. Can you scale the 300 dpi version up to 5.5x6.5 inches? Sure thing! But then the resolution goes down to 72 dpi. Similarly, we can change the 72dpi version to 300 dpi. But then the print size shrinks. Both files have the same pixel count. The resolution number is telling the layout program how much space to stretch those pixels out over. Shrunk down for the web both of the images on the page illustrated below probably look fine. But in print the larger one will be pixelated. The smaller one will look much better.
Another place this gets confusing is in the images coming straight out of a digital camera. For example, take a file that is 2000x1000 pixels. What is the resolution? © copyright 2007 by John Cornicello |
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