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Digital Lifestyle
Images, Graphic Design, and Digital Photography
Resize photos for web
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<blockquote data-quote="FritzDaCat" data-source="post: 1568080" data-attributes="member: 221274"><p>burnedfaceless:</p><p>Here's another method that I would recommend...</p><p>First 2 steps include resizing. Skip to #3 if you don't need pixel dimensions changed.</p><p>1) Open image, Choose>Image Size</p><p> assuming that you are <em>decreasing</em> the size of the image (or at least not enlarging it)</p><p>2) Select Pixel size that you require. If you're not sure, about 1000 pixels the long direction is typically plenty big. Make sure "resample image' and 'bicubic sharper" are selected. Ignore the resolution-- it's irrelevant for your task and will be dealt with automatically.</p><p>3) Select>File>Save For Web...</p><p>4) On the next screen, select JPEG HIGH for preset and 60 for quality. Check 'convert to sRGB'.</p><p>5) Click Save... and select a location.</p><p>The file will save automatically as 72 dpi, the quality will be very good for web and the file size will be minimal.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FritzDaCat, post: 1568080, member: 221274"] burnedfaceless: Here's another method that I would recommend... First 2 steps include resizing. Skip to #3 if you don't need pixel dimensions changed. 1) Open image, Choose>Image Size assuming that you are [I]decreasing[/I] the size of the image (or at least not enlarging it) 2) Select Pixel size that you require. If you're not sure, about 1000 pixels the long direction is typically plenty big. Make sure "resample image' and 'bicubic sharper" are selected. Ignore the resolution-- it's irrelevant for your task and will be dealt with automatically. 3) Select>File>Save For Web... 4) On the next screen, select JPEG HIGH for preset and 60 for quality. Check 'convert to sRGB'. 5) Click Save... and select a location. The file will save automatically as 72 dpi, the quality will be very good for web and the file size will be minimal. [/QUOTE]
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Resize photos for web
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