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Thread started 09 Feb 2010 (Tuesday) 15:11
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Cropping for development?

 
360°
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Feb 09, 2010 15:11 |  #1

what is the best way to crop a photo if you want to develop it?

usually i crop a photo and when i develop it, there are edges missing


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tkbslc
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Feb 09, 2010 15:14 |  #2

Does develop = print?

You are probably not taking into consideration the aspect ratio of the paper. 2x3 does not scale perfectly to 5x7,8x10, 11x14, 16x20, and most other common sizes.


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360°
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Feb 09, 2010 15:56 |  #3

tkbslc wrote in post #9575993 (external link)
Does develop = print?

You are probably not taking into consideration the aspect ratio of the paper. 2x3 does not scale perfectly to 5x7,8x10, 11x14, 16x20, and most other common sizes.

yes print

and for example 4x6 print... is there some kind template for cropping for the standard size photos


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tzalman
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Feb 09, 2010 16:01 |  #4

The crop tool in any photo editor will have preset crop box ratios that correspond to standard paper sizes plus the ability to set a custom ratio.


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SkipD
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Feb 10, 2010 04:28 |  #5

There are other factors involved in printing. Our inkjet printer, for example, cannot print to the edge of the paper on one end. There's a 1/2-inch white border left in any print made by it because of how the paper is handled.


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tzalman
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Feb 10, 2010 06:25 |  #6

SkipD wrote in post #9580004 (external link)
There are other factors involved in printing. Our inkjet printer, for example, cannot print to the edge of the paper on one end. There's a 1/2-inch white border left in any print made by it because of how the paper is handled.

Right, that's where the custom crop setting comes in. For instance, I usually print with a 1 cm. border. Having an equal border all around the print changes the ratio aspect of the printed area, so I use "Custom" rather than a preset.


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neilwood32
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Feb 10, 2010 06:50 |  #7

tzalman wrote in post #9580353 (external link)
Right, that's where the custom crop setting comes in. For instance, I usually print with a 1 cm. border. Having an equal border all around the print changes the ratio aspect of the printed area, so I use "Custom" rather than a preset.

IIRC all of the main packages (PS CSx, PSP, Gimp, etc) allow either presets as per the first image or custom by entering sizes in the boxes (circled in red)


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asysin2leads
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Feb 10, 2010 09:07 as a reply to  @ neilwood32's post |  #8

I always crop my images via CS4 before I send them to print. If I send an uncropped image to the lab, them I'm relying on someone else to determine what I want in a given dimension. If I eliminate the need for someone else doing it, then I ensure that the image is printed correctly. Most of your pro labs (Mpix, Millers, WHCC, Bay Lab and the other dozens) usually have a better handle on this as opposed to the local pharmacy, who has no clue about cropping or proper color management.


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tkbslc
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Feb 10, 2010 12:09 |  #9

360° wrote in post #9576254 (external link)
yes print

and for example 4x6 print... is there some kind template for cropping for the standard size photos

Yes, any photo editor can do that. If you don't have one, I would recommend getting one of two free programs which can help you - Picasa and Photoscape.


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