Topic awaiting preservation: Help needed! |
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Author | Thread |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |
posted 04-09-2002 17:26
Please.. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Southern Alabama, USA |
posted 04-09-2002 17:44
How many dpi the pictures are is pretty irrelevant, since you can change that easily in a graphic program like PS. |
Bipolar (III) Inmate From: Helsingborg, Sweden |
posted 04-09-2002 20:40
Ah, thanx alot! =) |
Maniac (V) Inmate From: Boston, MA, USA |
posted 04-10-2002 04:13
I don't think most digital cameras save at 72 DPI - I think they save at a "raw" or undefined resolution. Resolution is a sort of slippery concept, and 300 DPI is an abstract concept that only means anything is a fairly narrow discipline. If you camera saved at 300 DPI, someone shooting for a web site would be inconvenienced. The color lab we use has an Epsilon printer which images to photo paper at 257 DPI, and our Fuji Pictrography images at several resolutions including 200 and 267 DPI. So as Zox points out, it's the pixels that matter, not the resolution. Don't look for a camera that saves files at 300 DPI - look for a camera that can capture enough data to yield a usably large image at the resolution you expect to need. |