Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
Image size
When I edit an image with JASC software it seemd to dramatically reduce the file size eg. I recently cropped a photo and the file size fell from 688 KB to 119 KB. This will surely reduce the quality of a print will it not ? Even if I just flip it because it was reversed it still drops dramatically . Can I avoid this at all ?
TIA
TIA
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by isnibs. 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.Every time you edit a JPEG file you reduce the quality, that is the nature of JPEGs. This is also why you should NEVER work on the original JPEG file.
In your case you need to make sure you are saving the picture at the same quality level as the original.
For example if you save the picture with a low DPI (dots per inch) setting the file will be smaller.
See if your JASC software (Paint Shop Pro) is using a low default quality setting.
Or maybe try "Save As" instead of "Save" and see if the "Save As" window has a setting for the quality.
In your case you need to make sure you are saving the picture at the same quality level as the original.
For example if you save the picture with a low DPI (dots per inch) setting the file will be smaller.
See if your JASC software (Paint Shop Pro) is using a low default quality setting.
Or maybe try "Save As" instead of "Save" and see if the "Save As" window has a setting for the quality.
Some interesting info about JPEGs and editing.
http://graphicssoft.about.com/od/formatsjpeg/a /jpegmythsfacts.htm
Note that the article says
Q) JPEGs lose quality every time they are opened, edited and saved.
A) True. If a JPEG image is opened, edited, and saved again it results in additional image degradation
http://graphicssoft.about.com/od/formatsjpeg/a /jpegmythsfacts.htm
Note that the article says
Q) JPEGs lose quality every time they are opened, edited and saved.
A) True. If a JPEG image is opened, edited, and saved again it results in additional image degradation
isn
jpeg is by definition lossy .... whatever settings you use.... each time you save you loose a little more
the way to prevent this is to always use a lossyless format - (that's why tiff/bmp survives - and hi end cameras use .raw)
or .... your editing package's own format (in your case .psp .pspimage .... depending on your version of psp). This has the added advantage that if you work with layers, filters etc .... you preserve all these as well
Normally at the very least the pro's keep a master .... create a working copy then finally publish a .jpg .... which takes up lots of space ....
jpeg is by definition lossy .... whatever settings you use.... each time you save you loose a little more
the way to prevent this is to always use a lossyless format - (that's why tiff/bmp survives - and hi end cameras use .raw)
or .... your editing package's own format (in your case .psp .pspimage .... depending on your version of psp). This has the added advantage that if you work with layers, filters etc .... you preserve all these as well
Normally at the very least the pro's keep a master .... create a working copy then finally publish a .jpg .... which takes up lots of space ....