Film, Media & TV0 min ago
Scanning Photos for a Photo Book
5 Answers
I need to scan loys of old photos to create a photobook. I bought the scanner, Cannon 4400F several months ago, but have only just started to use it. Can anyone advise about what is the best resolution to use.
The scanner has lots of options and allows scanning at various resolution settings, depending on what the scanned item is to be used for - viewing on screen or printing out, but I don't know how this compares to making a photbook.
The instructions talk of "output resoltion" and also of "scanning resolution" for example output res 300dpi has scanning res of 1200dpi and the file resulting size is 6.5mb. My scanner instructions talk more about dots per inch (DPI) rather than pixels. I will be using a site like Truprint to get the book made. I have emailed them, but the automated reply was a waste of time. Any help is appreciated.
The scanner has lots of options and allows scanning at various resolution settings, depending on what the scanned item is to be used for - viewing on screen or printing out, but I don't know how this compares to making a photbook.
The instructions talk of "output resoltion" and also of "scanning resolution" for example output res 300dpi has scanning res of 1200dpi and the file resulting size is 6.5mb. My scanner instructions talk more about dots per inch (DPI) rather than pixels. I will be using a site like Truprint to get the book made. I have emailed them, but the automated reply was a waste of time. Any help is appreciated.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by countrykid. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.dpi & pixels are print density quality. The lower the number the less dots/pixels per inch = less memory. If photos are for viewing then quality isn't as important as for printing. The bigger the file (dpi) the longer it takes to upload/download.
Huge ?mb photos attached to emails can be a bore to download when the receiver is just viewing & not wanting to print.
Huge ?mb photos attached to emails can be a bore to download when the receiver is just viewing & not wanting to print.
I do digital scrapbooking and the standard for that is 300 dpi. Yes the files are big. If you are going to improve the photos in an editing program then after you have opened the jpeg, save the photo in the programs own format while you are editing, only saving the finished result as a jpeg. This is because everytime you resave a jpeg you lose some picture quality.