Should i resample image in photoshop




















I believe its the best way to learn Photoshop and thousands of people would agree with me. All the lesson files are included so you can follow along with me, step by step. Full 60 money back. Grab in the instant Download or DVD right now. I never knew any of this! I recall some tutorial saying something about Bicubic being a good choice in many instances, but, that was it! LOL Thank you very much! I apologize that a few of the comments have been deleted. Because of some technical problems I had to reupload this page..

Feel free to repost. I had a query we are now living in responsive era, so the images that we use in web are scale up for big screens and the same images are scale down on small device so there an idle option for such situations BiCubic Smoother, Bicubic sharper,etc. When designing you make the image at the largest size it will be needed, the browser will resize it from there.

Its covered in the resizing an Image section Bicubic sharper: Sharpens to bring back lost details while reducing a file. Suppose we have to resize single image which has both small text and picture and the image is scale down on small device and scale up on big device, so is resample the idle option, if yes then under resample which option to consider Bicubic sharper or Bicubic smoother or Preserve detail?

Thanks but i am still facing issue, i created a logo of X but my theme have a logo space for X80, when i save for web devices is blur.. Thanks in advance for your reply! I am entering a photograph into my first competitive exhibition. The image is a composite of 16 individual images stitched together. The combined image dimensions are: 11, x 18, pixels. I have two tasks to accomplish and I would appreciate your guidance.

To submit the image for jury, it needs to be a maximum of 3mb and the shortest dimension must be at least pixels. I am guessing I should resize the image to maximize its quality but your comments about the image becoming soft suggests for such a large resizing the sharpening needs could be significant. Do you have any suggestions to maximize the quality of this image file beyond the guidance you have provided?

If my image is selected, I will need to print for display at the gallery. Given the image is stitched do you know if there is any risk of the boundaries being visible if printed at the max? As a stitched image, would I be wise to engage in some image reduction to maximize the crispness of the composition? Any guidance would be greatly appreciated. I would ask the printer who is going to print it, what their specs are, they can vary widely, deepening on materials, coating, type of printing etc. I have never heard the fan run on this thing until now.

I am wondering if I make my layers smart objects, then resize the image down to a more manageable file size, will I then be able to enlarge it back up once it is ready to go to the printer without losing quality? I feel like this should work, especially if I make the current, edited layers smart objects, but kind of want to confirm before I waste 5 hours of work…. But test it. When the web developer resizes it smaller to fit the space provided in our website, the image quality becomes really poor.

Is there a way we can keep the quality high? I wish I would have found your informative website sooner! I have read so many piece meal tutorials and I just get more confused. Such as one recommendation for print was to only use DPI for printing any photograph! I never heard of this and the way the person described that was the best and using anything else you were basically a loser in the photography field.

Your explanations are clear and easy to follow. Thank you. I will be following and looking forward to some of your courses. For certain situations I just need a refresher on the process. Nice article. If you measure the actual width of the screen in this case You then enter this into the screen resolution box under Units and Rulers in Photoshop preferences. Then when you choose view print size, your image should measure exactly to its final print size. Is there any way to hide the stretching?

Or is it just an unfortunate side effect? Thanks in advance. You could pad the image with a solid color or repeating pattern and set the image to absolute rather than relative sizing. Hi Colin Thank you for an informative article. But what I find is that when it resize automatically the small size is always bigger than and when I resize the small size to fit , the image is distorted.

Well described. However, what I still have difficulty understanding is how to size images for use on my website. Primarily, I think, because it depends on the resolution of not only my screen but also in the real world where everyone views my site on different devices with different resolutions.

How do I resize images ie. However, some time ago I read that most monitors today are more likely What do you suggest? Another great tutorial Colin. Do you use photoshop to resample a image up or do you use another program and is there a better alternative to photoshop? The resolution changes to fit the extra pixels into each inch of the image based on the image's original size. Note: The original image used in the examples below is 4 x 4 inches, ppi, x pixels at In this example, Photoshop reduces the image by half of the physical size from 4 inches square to 2 inches.

When you set the physical size of the image in inches in the Crop tool options, and change the number of pixels per inch, the pixel dimensions change. The resulting image has more or fewer pixels in the document as a whole. You set the inches and the number of pixels in each of those inches. Photoshop removes or adds data to fit the number of pixels in each of the inches you specified.

In the first example, you reduced the physical size by half but balanced that by doubling the resolution. Therefore, the pixel dimensions and file size remained the same. In the second example, you reduced the physical size by half and increased the resolution. Therefore, the pixel dimensions increased to hold the extra number of pixels per inch. The file size also increased.

In the third example, you reduced the physical size by half and reduced the resolution the ppi. Therefore, the pixel dimensions decreased because there are fewer pixels now in the image.

The file size also decreased. When you set the pixel dimensions but you do not set the resolution, the resolution stabilizes at the same resolution as the original image. The new physical size is produced to hold the number of pixels specified in the image and per inch. The file size changes because you are changing the pixel dimensions while letting Photoshop stabilize the number of pixels per inch. In these examples, the resolution is unchanged but the pixel dimensions have changed.

The physical size changes to fit the number of pixels per inch you specified pixel dimensions. When you set the pixel dimensions and the resolution, Photoshop creates a different physical size. The image holds the number of pixels in the image and number of pixels per inch you specified. The files size changes because you are changing the total number of pixels in the image and the number of pixels in each inch.

In these examples, both the pixel dimensions and resolution are changed. The physical size changes to fit the total number of pixels and the number of pixels in each inch pixel dimensions and resolution. When you change only the resolution in the Crop tool options, the image size depends on the number of pixels in the crop area.

Tip: Look at the Info panel to see how many pixels are included in your crop area. In these examples, Photoshop uses the size of your crop selection and the resolution you specify to resize the image. The new image's physical size and pixel dimensions fit the number of pixels in the crop selection you drew and the new resolution you set.

Buy Adobe Photoshop or start a Free Trial. Legal Notices Online Privacy Policy. Buy now. Advanced cropping, resizing, resampling Search. Image sizes onscreen and in print. Screen size. Image size onscreen. Image size in print. Image Size dialog box. Image size when it's open in Photoshop: This value appears at the top of the dialog box. Document size: Physical size of the image when printed, including a width and height. Image resolution when printed: This value appears in pixels per inch or pixels per centimeter.

Resizing and resampling images. Changing the pixel dimensions affects the physical size but not the resolution. Changing the resolution affects the pixel dimensions but not the physical size. Changing the physical size affects the pixel dimensions but not the resolution. Resizing images without resampling.

Using the Crop tool. Crop tool options. Changing inch size only. Inch size you set. Resolution changed by Photoshop. Pixel dimensions size of the crop selection you drew. Users can manage and block the use of cookies through their browser. Disabling or blocking certain cookies may limit the functionality of this site.

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Continued use of the site after the effective date of a posted revision evidences acceptance. Please contact us if you have questions or concerns about the Privacy Notice or any objection to any revisions. All rights reserved. Publishers of technology books, eBooks, and videos for creative people. Image Size Dialog Box For those of us who have to teach Photoshop as well as use it, the Image Size dialog box is always one of the biggest sources of confusion, because the results you get depend not only on which buttons you click and which fields you type numbers into, but also on the order in which you do so.

Pixel Dimensions. The best way to specify an image's size is by its pixel dimensions—these tell you exactly how much data you have to work with. The Pixel Dimensions section shows you both the dimensions and the file's size, in megabytes or K, if it's under 1 MB. Document Size. A bitmapped image has no inherent size—it's just pixels on a grid. The Document Size section lets you tag the image with a size and resolution, so that when you import the file into some other program, it knows the image size.

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