What is the best way to save a digital image and not lose quality over time. I know it is not JPEG, but what else, TIFF? EPS? Photoshop Doc.?
JR92 Member 65 posts Joined Jul 2002 More info | Jan 29, 2003 19:37 | #1 What is the best way to save a digital image and not lose quality over time. I know it is not JPEG, but what else, TIFF? EPS? Photoshop Doc.?
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robertwgross Cream of the Crop 9,462 posts Likes: 3 Joined Nov 2002 Location: California More info | Jan 29, 2003 20:22 | #2 JR92 wrote: What is the best way to save a digital image and not lose quality over time. I know it is not JPEG, but what else, TIFF? EPS? Photoshop Doc.? I think you will get your best results with TIF. There are at least two variations of TIF. One is "straight TIF" and one is "LZW TIF". The latter does a lossless compression on the file, so it takes a little longer to save and it packs into a tighter file size. Some images will "pack tightly" in LZW TIF, and some will come out about the same as straight TIF.
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Jan 29, 2003 21:14 | #3 Thanks for your advise Bob.
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Roger_Cavanagh Goldmember 1,394 posts Joined Sep 2001 More info | Jan 30, 2003 07:42 | #4 If you are using Photoshop (can't speak for other editors), there are now plug-ins available for formats such as PNG and JPEG 2000 that will provide lossless compression with good results. The downside is that not all applications support these formats and the formats don't support stuff like layers and EXIF. I have been wondering about J2k, but haven't made this switch yet because I don't get thumbnails displayed in IE or ThumbsPlus. Cerious are promising better J2k support in their next version, so I will reconsider then. =============
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Dans_D60 Senior Member 592 posts Joined Apr 2002 Location: Temecula Ca More info | Jan 30, 2003 08:25 | #5 Roger_Cavanagh wrote: As for resolution and JPGs. If you are preparing the JPGs solely for screen/web use, then DPI is irrelevant. What matters is the pixels dimensions. DPI will only affect the physical print size of an image. Regards, I agree that DPI depth for JPG images on the web has little effect unless you drop below 72 DPI. Display screens cannot reproduce images larger than 72-96 DPI depending on the pixel layout. So anything larger just gets lost anyway. But, larger DPI images means larger file sizes. So as a rule of thumb all my images for web reproduction are set to 72 DPI while my print resolutions are set at 240 – 300 depending on the printer selection. Dan
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Roger_Cavanagh Goldmember 1,394 posts Joined Sep 2001 More info | Jan 30, 2003 13:39 | #6 Dans_D60 wrote: I agree that DPI depth for JPG images on the web has little effect unless you drop below 72 DPI. Display screens cannot reproduce images larger than 72-96 DPI depending on the pixel layout. So anything larger just gets lost anyway. But, larger DPI images means larger file sizes. So as a rule of thumb all my images for web reproduction are set to 72 DPI while my print resolutions are set at 240 – 300 depending on the printer selection. Dan http://www.pettusphoto.com Dan, =============
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Dans_D60 Senior Member 592 posts Joined Apr 2002 Location: Temecula Ca More info | Jan 30, 2003 14:44 | #7 Roger_Cavanagh wrote: Dan, Nope, DPI will not change the file size just by itself. If you are using Photoshop and change with DPI with the resample box checked then the dimensions of the image in pixels will change so that the physical print size of the image remains the same at the new DPI. But you can change the DPI with resample off and the number of pixels does not change. And, broadly speaking, the file size will be related to the number of pixels (ignoring JPG compression, layers, EXIF and other stuff). The size of the image on screen will not change NO MATTER WHAT DPI - a pixel is a pixel is a pixel. If an image is 400 x 400 pixels that is how much real estate it will take up on your screen whether DPI is 72, 240, 300 or whatever. I'd post some example, but Photoshop is tied up doing a batch conversion right now. Regards, I guess the use of ‘size’ with pixel dimension, document size, and file size should have been more clearly explained. By maintaining the same document size (8X10) and reducing the DPI (300 to 72) would reduce the pixel dimensions (3200X2100 to 780X520) thereby reducing the file size. I totally agree a 400 X 400 image is what it is - and basic mathematics is constant (at least I hope so!). Sorry about the confusion! Dan
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chewiebakka Mostly Lurking 16 posts Joined Feb 2003 More info | Feb 06, 2003 03:47 | #8 so lzwTIFF just try to compress the tiff file?
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robertwgross Cream of the Crop 9,462 posts Likes: 3 Joined Nov 2002 Location: California More info | Feb 06, 2003 12:26 | #9 It is hard to understand it that is a question.
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