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Resizing your Photo's |
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Most, if not all, digital cameras come with supplemental software which enables even neophytes to do basic photo processing. With these programs provided by the camera manufacturers, you should be able to resize, crop, adjust brightness and contrast, and adjust sharpness, on any and all of your photos. |
your "users" folder under your name, and under pictures and then some sub folder relative to the process of downloading photos from your camera to your computer. If you can't find your photos for resizing, you wont be able to email them to me "resized" either. The same process you use to attach a photo to an email is the same process you should be using here, to locate your photos for resizing. |
The following are examples of resized photos.
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This photo has been resized to 800 horizontal pixels by 533 vertical pixels from the original 3,504 x 2336 pixels. |
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600 pixels x 400 pixels (The standard 6x4 photo format or the aspect ratio you get from 35mm film cameras) |
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Lastly, if you look closely at the 800 pixel picture, you will notice something under the wharf. There are actually people in Kayaks under the wharf and this makes my point of what happens when you resize to a smaller size, you lose detail. If this is a concern of yours, learn how to crop and then resize the crop to your favorite size. This one is not resized but is shown in its 1:1 format. I just happened to choose a crop of 300 pixels. and a full size 300 pixel portion of this same photo, cropped out of the original. |
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I hope you see the value and importance of resizing (and
cropping.) It
is an absolute necessity to embrace resizing your digital photos ifyou ever get serious about emailing or posting your photo gems on the web.
(Cropping
is just a fun refinement of resizing.) |
leading alpha character of "a" e.g. If the photo file name is img8125.jpg, the new resized photo file name is then assigned to
aimg8125.jpg. This accomplishes two things: you prevent destroying your original photo file and you have a reference to the file you originally resized from. This makes it easy to go back in the future to that same file and resize to different sizes or to crop it differently. |
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© copyright mark All of the images and text on this post are copyright protected and have been digitally watermarked. The images and text displayed here, in no way implies consent for any form of distribution or reuse. Email me if you desire permission to do so. |
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