

Stop doing that! Set your camera to record images in the highest resolution possible and buy a new memory card, if necessary. No! Your sensor is the epitome of the 3:2 ratio (3008x2008 pixels) which is the same as a 4圆 print. after you hit ok, you will have to readjust the view of the image in the pp editor. if you want the 5x7 do this and you will get them. If you know that you are going to crop, then do this first. you now have a image that you can print to your wanted size without getting error messages from walmart. and in the dropdown that says bicubic use "bicubic sharper". it is so you do not do this twice.) in resolution put in 360. when the window opens put the size of your wanted print in the inches section(note-if you want a 5x7 overshoot and put in 8x10. click the image tab at the top, then resize. with it you can do the following-open image, it may be too small for good printing. You probably will find yourself needing better pp software. The next is somewhat technical, but it works. if you crop try to the amount at an absolute minamum, or you will have the problem you have now. i do my framing and composition in the dslr in the field when i shoot the image. this mean that the amount of cropping is at a minamum. try to frame and compose you shot the WAY YOU WILL USE IT LATER.


if the file is too big then make it samller later. first you should always shoot at max size and image quality. i have printed an awful lot of my istd shot at 20x30inches with no problem at all. More compression means throwing away more information from your images. You should be saving with the /least/ amount of compression resulting in the highest quality file. By saving to the "highest compression" that means you are doing exactly the wrong thing to your images. What Andrew should have said is "highest quality" and left off the compression part. There's something that needs to be clarified here. You need to find a different workflow and probably new editing tools. Right now your images have too few pixels and are compressed far too much to be good for anything but 4圆 prints. You need to be worried about both the total number of pixels and the file size. It will still print the file, but the warning is there for their protection - trying to minimize the number of customers unhappy with their prints because their files were low res. So for example, if it wants 250 PPI files and you submit an 800x1200 file to print at 4圆, that's 200 PPI and it gives you a warning. The Wal Mart system is probably set up to warn you if your resolution is below a certain PPI. I shoot raw if I'm likely to do edits and only save JPGs as a final step. Any time you compress an image to JPG you introduce quality loss, so if you get JPG from your camera, edit, save as JPG, load it again later, edit, save as JPG, etc., you can start to really lose quality.

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Unless your software is doing something weird, like a save for web preset.įile size can be dealt with by making sure you use high quality compression settings when saving, and resaving as JPG as little as possible. Are you cropping or resizing the shots? There's no reason making them B&W or using blurring should decrease the resolution.
