Nelsonfoto Forums
May 23, 2012, 10:45:55 PM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
News
: SMF - Just Installed!
Home
Help
Login
Register
Nelsonfoto Forums
>
Dude, I'm Geekin' Out Over Here!
>
The Modern Print & Digital Darkroom
>
PhotoShop Elements Sizing help
Pages: [
1
]
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: PhotoShop Elements Sizing help (Read 374 times)
Zen Librarian
Shutter Girl
Prolific Poster
Posts: 972
Square is where it's at, Baby!
PhotoShop Elements Sizing help
«
on:
March 30, 2009, 05:47:26 PM »
Whenever I save a photo in PS Elements it basically shrinks the photo size in half. For instance, I can scan a photo at 6.7mb but when I save it, it's only 3.71mb. What gives?? I save it at the maximum photo size, is it incapable of saving anything larger?
HELP!!
:end:
Logged
flickr me
wanderlust
GerryM
Prolific Poster
Posts: 911
PhotoShop Elements Sizing help
«
Reply #1 on:
March 30, 2009, 06:09:17 PM »
My work flow is to post process in either PS E5 or CS2. I make the changes that I feel are needed, then click on "images", resize to my choice and save to "documents". Regardless of the "thumbnail" or whatever it is, the saved image is full size. Does this make any sense? You are probably lioght years ahead of me anyway, as I am a large % Luddite.
Gerry
Logged
Don Day
O frabjous day!
Prolific Poster
Posts: 1581
PhotoShop Elements Sizing help
«
Reply #2 on:
March 30, 2009, 06:16:22 PM »
File size can be misleading due to how jpeg compression handles different kinds of texture in an image, and whether elements is saving at a higher compression than the original compression rate. Did you happen to notice at what compression PS Elements defaulted to when you saved? Try two different test saves, one at a setting of 5 or lower and the other at the highest setting. The second save might be many times the size of the first one. A large resolution picture saved at low compression still has "high resolution," but the image quality will be low. So you need to watch your compression at save time religiously--chances are, it is not the resolution that was cut (look at the file properties to verify), but the image quality at the original resolution, due to lower, lossy compression.
I hope this was not already obvious in your search for clues.
Logged
_
Don Day
/
_
Light of Day
_
Pages: [
1
]
Print
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
General
-----------------------------
=> The F Stops Here
=> Making It Work For You | Business Matters
=> Photography-related | Workshops, Book Reviews, Site Reviews & Suggestions
=> The ? of it All | Photographical Belly-Button Exploration
=> The Eyes Have It | W/NW
-----------------------------
Dude, I'm Geekin' Out Over Here!
-----------------------------
=> Technical Central
=> Let there be light!
=> Nelson's Garage - The Retouch/Editing forum
=> The Modern Print & Digital Darkroom
=> Film & Darkroom
=> DIY-ing to Try Something New?
=> Critiquing Forum
-----------------------------
Gearheads
-----------------------------
=> Heads Up! Guilt-Free HU-Zone
=> Point-N-Shoot, Pinhole, Polaroid, and Plastic Emporium
=> the Classics
=> SLRs | Rangefinders | Lenses & other for both
=> Digital Dharma
=> Bigger Is Better
-----------------------------
Working Together
-----------------------------
=> Fuji Instax Tour | Home
=> Community Projects | Winter/Summer Challenges Underway!
=> Found Film & Vintage Prints
=> Global FED2 - Olga hits the road!
=> Hagar the Wandering Viking
=> Shurflash Project Archives
Loading...