duydaniel said:Say if I have a 23 megapixels (Canon 5D3).
What are the differences in print result if I export say 300 dpi vs 400 dpi?
Would I be able to print larger or something?
duydaniel said:Say if I have a 23 megapixels (Canon 5D3).
What are the differences in print result if I export say 300 dpi vs 400 dpi?
Would I be able to print larger or something?
STEMI_RN said:It just comes down to the print resolution. 300 DPI is the standard, but you can find printers that print even higher than that. The reason this becomes important is that you can't print (and still look good) at less than 300 dpi. So you have to look at the max resolution of the image (for a 5D3 that's 5760 x 3840) and divide those dimensions by your desired print resolution (like 300 DPI) and that gives you the maximum size printable. 5760x3840 = 19.2" x 12.8" - Never print an image from a 5D3 larger than this.
The reason this becomes important is that you can't print (and still look good) at less than 300 dpi.
docholliday said:On my 44" printer, I always try to aim for at least 300dpi (Canon/HP) or 360dpi (Epson) for "optimal" quality prints.
The export CAN make a difference - 300 vs 400 dpi is how many dots per inch. If exported too low (try printing an exported RAW 96dpi 8x10 and then a 400dpi 8x10 from the same file), the output software/driver/engine will have to interpolate to make up the extra pixels needed and the pixels will virtually be "larger". This will reduce the perceptual gradation smoothness. But, there is a point where it is overkill.
duydaniel said:This is nice!!!
If I understand correctly,
The 5D3 has 5760 x 3840, so if I want to print a 30x20
I just divide 5760/30 = 192 dpi.
Then export the image should bea 192 dpi.
Malte_P said:duydaniel said:This is nice!!!
If I understand correctly,
The 5D3 has 5760 x 3840, so if I want to print a 30x20
I just divide 5760/30 = 192 dpi.
Then export the image should bea 192 dpi.
well the exported image usualy should have the MAXIMUM amount of pixels.
you don´t downsample an image without a reason.
if you say i want to print in 10x15cm in good quality you can downsample (means you throw pixels away) an image so it still has 300 DPI and save some space.
if you say 180 DPI are enough for a 10x15cm print you can downsample even further and make the image even smaller.
lets say you have an 4000x2000 pixel image.
you can print the 4000x2000 pixels at 300 DPI and have a 13,3x6,6 inch print.
or you can print the SAME 4000x200 pixels at 180 DPI and have a 22,2x11,1inch print.
or you can say... i only want a 13,3x6,6 inch print at 180 DPI.
you then can and RESAMPLE the image to 2448x1197 pixels and save some space on your harddisk.
but you normaly want to preserve the maximum amout of pixels.
i do...![]()
duydaniel said:Malte_P said:duydaniel said:This is nice!!!
If I understand correctly,
The 5D3 has 5760 x 3840, so if I want to print a 30x20
I just divide 5760/30 = 192 dpi.
Then export the image should bea 192 dpi.
well the exported image usualy should have the MAXIMUM amount of pixels.
you don´t downsample an image without a reason.
if you say i want to print in 10x15cm in good quality you can downsample (means you throw pixels away) an image so it still has 300 DPI and save some space.
if you say 180 DPI are enough for a 10x15cm print you can downsample even further and make the image even smaller.
lets say you have an 4000x2000 pixel image.
you can print the 4000x2000 pixels at 300 DPI and have a 13,3x6,6 inch print.
or you can print the SAME 4000x200 pixels at 180 DPI and have a 22,2x11,1inch print.
or you can say... i only want a 13,3x6,6 inch print at 180 DPI.
you then can and RESAMPLE the image to 2448x1197 pixels and save some space on your harddisk.
but you normaly want to preserve the maximum amout of pixels.
i do...![]()
This seems to give a different ideas to previous posts I read.
Anyway, I just try to export an image (Canon 5D3) 23 megapixels to a 15000x10000 pixel image.
The result is quite incredible. It is a 15000x10000 image!!!
The 100% view is much larger than the original... I guess the resolution is still the same but they just split a pixel into smaller ones
duydaniel said:This is nice!!!
If I understand correctly,
The 5D3 has 5760 x 3840, so if I want to print a 30x20
I just divide 5760/30 = 192 dpi.
Then export the image should bea 192 dpi.
Malte_P said:docholliday said:On my 44" printer, I always try to aim for at least 300dpi (Canon/HP) or 360dpi (Epson) for "optimal" quality prints.
jeff schewes says for the new epsons 720 DPI is the best setting.
if you have the pixels to reach this without upscaling.
there is a whole LL video about this, worth watching.
The export CAN make a difference - 300 vs 400 dpi is how many dots per inch. If exported too low (try printing an exported RAW 96dpi 8x10 and then a 400dpi 8x10 from the same file), the output software/driver/engine will have to interpolate to make up the extra pixels needed and the pixels will virtually be "larger". This will reduce the perceptual gradation smoothness. But, there is a point where it is overkill.
correct me if im wrong but setting the DPI in LR will not RESAMPLE the image?!
so it doesn´t matter.
you can set PIXEL to 1920 pixels and change the DPI to whatever you want... LR will still export a 1920 pixel image. so it doesn´t really matter. you can still set the DPI when you actually going to PRINT the image.
i don´t know for sure because i only print from photoshop and i never use the DPI setting in LR´s export dialog.
but it should not resample the image i think. that´s what the PIXEL option is for.
DFM said:PPI (Pixels Per Inch, which are different from Dots Per Inch) will decide the number of pixels in the exported image only if you set the Image Sizing measurement unit to inches or cm instead of pixels. If you stick to the default of pixels, it has no effect whatsoever. The only reason for showing physical units on that dialog is to help you do the math.
PPI is a tag in the JPEG header which tells third-party software how to calculate the "100%" physical size of the image, for example when placing it into another document or starting the page setup for a printout with "use actual size" selected. It doesn't affect image quality, sharpening, etc. in any way. In the attached 100% crop of some laser engraving, the left side was exported at 1200PPI and the right side at 12PPI (print sharpening enabled).
When printing from any pixel-based format, the image size (in pixels) and the scaling factor (in percent) are all that matter. If you export a 1000x1000 pixel JPEG file at 300PPI, and another one at 30PPI, then use 'fit to page' when printing, the result will be identical. However, drop them into a Word file and the second one will be zoomed like crazy.
docholliday said:Malte_P said:docholliday said:On my 44" printer, I always try to aim for at least 300dpi (Canon/HP) or 360dpi (Epson) for "optimal" quality prints.
jeff schewes says for the new epsons 720 DPI is the best setting.
if you have the pixels to reach this without upscaling.
there is a whole LL video about this, worth watching.
The export CAN make a difference - 300 vs 400 dpi is how many dots per inch. If exported too low (try printing an exported RAW 96dpi 8x10 and then a 400dpi 8x10 from the same file), the output software/driver/engine will have to interpolate to make up the extra pixels needed and the pixels will virtually be "larger". This will reduce the perceptual gradation smoothness. But, there is a point where it is overkill.
correct me if im wrong but setting the DPI in LR will not RESAMPLE the image?!
so it doesn´t matter.
you can set PIXEL to 1920 pixels and change the DPI to whatever you want... LR will still export a 1920 pixel image. so it doesn´t really matter. you can still set the DPI when you actually going to PRINT the image.
i don´t know for sure because i only print from photoshop and i never use the DPI setting in LR´s export dialog.
but it should not resample the image i think. that´s what the PIXEL option is for.
LR won't resample the image, but the printing app will a 1900px image at 100dpi will be 19" at native res. at 200dpi, it'll be 950px. If you set the 200dpi and still want 19", it'll have to interpolate an extra 950px into the image to make it work (or print the existing pixels at twice their size).
So, yes, it does matter.
jeff schewes says for the new epsons 720 DPI is the best setting.
With the Epson printers - it depends on what the NATIVE resolution of the print engine is. If it's a 720x360 engine, then 360 would be the default.