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#11
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On this particular day of this month, in the Year Of The Golden Pig, P & H Macguire did state:
I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. Regards PJM Absolutely scan at 300dpi or even more. You can always reduce (dpi, size, etc.) but no matter what, no matter how a pic is, enlarging more than 25% is useless and there is much quality degradation. Avoid 72 dpi like unto the plague. That was a semi-arbitrary resolution based on the early browsers that could not display more than that, and the palettes were also fewer than 256 colours. Those were the old days. And today's monitors, both LCD and CRT, can display even more than 300 dpi, and do it well. Optimally, save at the highest settings all around for archival purposes; with high quality CD+R disks selling for under a dollar apiece (Canadian, eh? Prolly about U$D $0.70 or less), it shouldn't be a problem. In addition to keeping the originals, the current post-production (cropping, colour tweaking, sharpening, etc.) 'storage' size is 1600x1200. Probably the best way to keep filesizes down is to (when finished tweaking and all that) save at 85% of the original 'quality'. The difference in filesize is striking, and truly, I have yet to find /anyone/ that can tell the difference between 100% and 85% because of the way JPEG compression handles the data. As for filesizes, both physical and byte-wise, for this group, that would depend on your FAQ or whatever has been decided either formally or by general agreement, like the yEnc issue. (and yes, I know the debate thoroughly; yEnc be GOOD, but Bill Gates has his own rules, which are by default /your/ rules, like it or not) Next door in ABPAutos, 1280 has now become the norm, and 1024 is considered a bit small. It all depends, methinks, on how much detail you wish to see, and for now, 1280 @ ~85% reduction is working extremely well. However, beware of the various file manipulator progs. Your image editor, e.g., PSP, Photoshop and The GIMP (Linux, /free/ and excellent, and I believe there are versions for PC and Mac) are your best bets. One notable exception to this is IrfanView, a freebie, and although it is a small program, it has become legendary amongst users for it's output quality, and legendary amongst programmers, who continually praise its elegance of programming. Grab a copy and play with it a bit and you'll likely be quite surprised at how much it can do and how well it does it all. But, it should NOT be a replacement for a good image manipulation graphics prog, but a very good adjunct program. Drop by ABPAutos and have a look; you don't need to know anything about cars to evaluate the pix; after all, I know virtually zilch about aircraft, but I lurk here, and love it. I just think planes are cool, I love learning about them, and I pass interesting pix along to two pilot friends. (The Leduc-22 was the most recent; one of the pilots is also an aviation journalist, and it took him on a very Sentimental Journey!) FWIW, but I hope it helps in some small way. However, the Gilded Rule is go BIG; you can always go downwards (or 'downsize' these days!) to suit your needs! SW -- There is no religion without love, and people may talk as much as they like about their religion, but if it does not teach them to be good and kind to other animals as well as humans, it is all a sham. -Anna Sewell, writer (1820-1878) |
#12
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![]() "P & H Macguire" wrote in message ... I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. Regards PJM Thanks to everybody who took the time. A lot of food for thought there. Regards PJM |
#13
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![]() §qu@re Wheels wrote: On this particular day of this month, in the Year Of The Golden Pig, P & H Macguire did state: I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. Regards PJM Absolutely scan at 300dpi or even more. You can always reduce (dpi, size, etc.) but no matter what, no matter how a pic is, enlarging more than 25% is useless and there is much quality degradation. Avoid 72 dpi like unto the plague. That was a semi-arbitrary resolution based on the early browsers that could not display more than that, and the palettes were also fewer than 256 colours. Those were the old days. And today's monitors, both LCD and CRT, can display even more than 300 dpi, and do it well. Please list monitors (any) that display higher resolution than 72 dpi. Optimally, save at the highest settings all around for archival purposes; with high quality CD+R disks selling for under a dollar apiece (Canadian, eh? Prolly about U$D $0.70 or less), it shouldn't be a problem. In addition to keeping the originals, the current post-production (cropping, colour tweaking, sharpening, etc.) 'storage' size is 1600x1200. Probably the best way to keep filesizes down is to (when finished tweaking and all that) save at 85% of the original 'quality'. The difference in filesize is striking, and truly, I have yet to find /anyone/ that can tell the difference between 100% and 85% because of the way JPEG compression handles the data. As for filesizes, both physical and byte-wise, for this group, that would depend on your FAQ or whatever has been decided either formally or by general agreement, like the yEnc issue. (and yes, I know the debate thoroughly; yEnc be GOOD, but Bill Gates has his own rules, which are by default /your/ rules, like it or not) Next door in ABPAutos, 1280 has now become the norm, and 1024 is considered a bit small. It all depends, methinks, on how much detail you wish to see, and for now, 1280 @ ~85% reduction is working extremely well. However, beware of the various file manipulator progs. Your image editor, e.g., PSP, Photoshop and The GIMP (Linux, /free/ and excellent, and I believe there are versions for PC and Mac) are your best bets. One notable exception to this is IrfanView, a freebie, and although it is a small program, it has become legendary amongst users for it's output quality, and legendary amongst programmers, who continually praise its elegance of programming. Grab a copy and play with it a bit and you'll likely be quite surprised at how much it can do and how well it does it all. But, it should NOT be a replacement for a good image manipulation graphics prog, but a very good adjunct program. Drop by ABPAutos and have a look; you don't need to know anything about cars to evaluate the pix; after all, I know virtually zilch about aircraft, but I lurk here, and love it. I just think planes are cool, I love learning about them, and I pass interesting pix along to two pilot friends. (The Leduc-22 was the most recent; one of the pilots is also an aviation journalist, and it took him on a very Sentimental Journey!) FWIW, but I hope it helps in some small way. However, the Gilded Rule is go BIG; you can always go downwards (or 'downsize' these days!) to suit your needs! SW |
#14
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On this particular day of this month, in the Year Of The Golden Pig,
Grumpy AuContraire did state: Please list monitors (any) that display higher resolution than 72 dpi. Almost all today can default to 96 dpi, and if it's more than 19" can be tweaked into the 110+ range. DPI is extremely confusing, because there are so many variables. My Samsung 214t is set to display at 131 dpi because in part it is set to 1600x1200 native res. When you get into the 5000xWhatever range (which I can't; I'm maxed), then you're getting up to around the 300 dpi mark -- or so the manufacturers say. One major problem is that the Windoze environment has its own limits, which are less than simply what the monitor is capable of (and that's about all I remember about Windoze). As for the Mac environment, I know zilch, though I've heard it's about the same as Windoze, except for perhaps their newest pricey offering. But in truth, right now dpi is far more important for printing and archiving purposes, but for monitors it is increasing in importance as well. The new widescreen monitors (as well as the monster 40" and up plasma HDTVs) will display at a higher dpi because their native desktop size is larger. And of course, the 5:4 vs 4:3 ratio issue is adding to the confusion as well. However, an expert can offer far better info than I; unfortunately my personal 'Puter Wizard and wife are both on the road lecturing in different places and unavailable. So, 96 dpi is fairly universal, and that increases with acreage and price. Since the Web is still basically a 72 dpi medium, most manufacturers have not made increasing display res much of a priority. The vast majority of people are happy just the way things are. I tend to think in "High End" terms because so many of the people I know are computer professionals, graphics professionals and media types. So I really should have added that although many monitors can easily display 300 dpi, you pay /heavily/ for it, and many of these monitors are not even available (yet) at the retail level. And that's about all I can say; the whole issue is very mathematically-oriented, and I just don't speak math very well at all. SW -- From: (via teranews) Reported to: , , And they are very tired of you. Message-ID: Yes, there's a bitch that replies to me, kinda telling me the problem's with the Canadian Shaw's personnel. But prescience pays off and long as you violate the groups charter, or just Usenet's common decency, I'll be there to report you. You being a traitor is a especial incentive. |
#15
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![]() "Jim Townsend" wrote in message ... octothorpe wrote: May I add that the size that you suggested should be at ~72 dpi resolution to keep the file size smaller for the web. Monitors cannot display the 300 dpi res any better than the 72 dpi res. The 300 is good for printing. FWIW, The DPI setting has *nothing* whatsoever to do with the file size of an image. It's a confusing subect ![]() explanation. http://www.larry-bolch.com/dpi-revealed/ Thanks for the link, Jim. I'll have to open up Irfanview and PSP to experiment. Tom |
#16
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![]() "The Old Bloke" wrote in message ... "octothorpe" wrote in message news:mJg1i.5118$3B5.4926@trnddc08... "Luke" wrote in message ... "P & H Macguire" wrote in message ... I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. 640X480 is a dandy size for initial viewing. If folks want larger prints for wallpaper or suck they will ask. They are never shy. Luke May I add that the size that you suggested should be at ~72 dpi resolution to keep the file size smaller for the web. Monitors cannot display the 300 dpi res any better than the 72 dpi res. The 300 is good for printing. Tom For qualty retention 4800X4800 is needed. But don't post at that resolution. Doug |
#17
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![]() "octothorpe" wrote in message news:mJg1i.5118$3B5.4926@trnddc08... "Luke" wrote in message ... "P & H Macguire" wrote in message ... I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. 640X480 is a dandy size for initial viewing. If folks want larger prints for wallpaper or suck they will ask. They are never shy. Luke May I add that the size that you suggested should be at ~72 dpi resolution to keep the file size smaller for the web. Monitors cannot display the 300 dpi res any better than the 72 dpi res. The 300 is good for printing. Tom Yes for posting that is OK, but not for scanning. A slide is about 1 inch by 1 inch, so at 72 dpi you would have only 72 dots across the image. So scan at 2400 or 4800, and then sub sample for posting. Dedicated slide scanners for home use usually use 2400/4800/9600 dpi. |
#18
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![]() "Grumpy AuContraire" wrote in message news ![]() §qu@re Wheels wrote: On this particular day of this month, in the Year Of The Golden Pig, P & H Macguire did state: I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. Regards PJM Absolutely scan at 300dpi or even more. You can always reduce (dpi, size, etc.) but no matter what, no matter how a pic is, enlarging more than 25% is useless and there is much quality degradation. Avoid 72 dpi like unto the plague. That was a semi-arbitrary resolution based on the early browsers that could not display more than that, and the palettes were also fewer than 256 colours. Those were the old days. And today's monitors, both LCD and CRT, can display even more than 300 dpi, and do it well. Please list monitors (any) that display higher resolution than 72 dpi. My monitor is an Apple Mac 23" (running on a PC) and it has 1920 X 1200. The vertical dimension is 12" So about 100dpi. My Sony VAIO notebook has 1920 X 1200 and the screen is 9" high. That's 133 dpi. There are two issues. Scanning for archive and then the (reduced) size for posting. When I scan a slide I do it for archiving and I use 4800. Even that doesn't do the slide its full credit. For archival, you also need to consider the colour depth. 48 bit is great for a slide, but normal jpg will only save 32 bit. There is a higher depth jpeg (jpeg2000, I think) but I don't use it. It's a rare format and I don't trust trust it to supported in 20 years time. If you do scan a slide at 72 dpi, then you will have an image that is roughly 72 X 72. Almost unusable. Regards snip |
#19
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![]() "Dave Kearton" wrote in message ... The Old Bloke wrote: "octothorpe" wrote in message news:mJg1i.5118$3B5.4926@trnddc08... "Luke" wrote in message ... "P & H Macguire" wrote in message ... I am in the process of scanning some old slides of 60s to 90s and wondered what the optimum size should be for posting on this N/G. They will be scanned at about 300dpi. 640X480 is a dandy size for initial viewing. If folks want larger prints for wallpaper or suck they will ask. They are never shy. Luke May I add that the size that you suggested should be at ~72 dpi resolution to keep the file size smaller for the web. Monitors cannot display the 300 dpi res any better than the 72 dpi res. The 300 is good for printing. Tom For qualty retention 4800X4800 is needed. Don't listen to him, he's from the dark side (by the way Luke, he's your father) Oi Davo, carefull!!!! :-)) |
#20
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On this particular day of this month, in the Year Of The Golden Pig, The
Old Bloke did state: There is a higher depth jpeg (jpeg2000, I think) but I don't use it. It's a rare format and I don't trust trust it to supported in 20 years time. It's not even supported now, AFAIK. Haven't seen one in over a year, and even then the poster got blasted for using it. I think PNG will be around for a while; it at least is being used, but mostly as a hi-res high-colour GIF would be because it has transparency capabilities. Filesizes are out of line, though. If they can get that under control, it might hang around a while. Meanwhile, the JPEG crowd (Joint Photographic Expert Group) are trying (or were) to grab royalties as a propriety format. If they ever succeeded, which is about as likely as me inheriting the British Crown Jewels, it would be a revenue-neutral business. SW -- From: (via teranews) Reported to: , , And they are very tired of you. Message-ID: Yes, there's a bitch that replies to me, kinda telling me the problem's with the Canadian Shaw's personnel. But prescience pays off and long as you violate the groups charter, or just Usenet's common decency, I'll be there to report you. You being a traitor is a especial incentive. |
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