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An Introduction to Scanning and Storing Photographs and Graphics Bryn Jones Aug 2002 bjones@nd.edu.au
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4 Pixels and pixel depth 4 Resolution 4 File types 4 File sizes 4 Compression of graphics files
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4 The computer stores and displays pixels, or picture elements. 4 A pixel is the smallest addressable part of the computer screen. 4 A pixel is stored as a binary code representing a colour. 4 The code for a pixel can have between 1 and 32 bits of binary code.
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4 Here is the Photoshop logo at normal size. 4 Here it is enlarged 400% so that you can see the individual pixels.
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4 Pixel Depth describes the number of bits used to store each pixel. 4 The greater the pixel depth, the more colours a pixel can have. 4 Colour graphics vary in realism depending on resolution and pixel depth. 4 The greater the pixel depth, the bigger the file.
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4 Monochrome graphics have one-bit pixel depth. (pure black or pure white)
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4 Gray-Scale graphics have more bit-depth (No colours besides black, white and grey)
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4 8 bits per pixel provides 256 colour choices (Typical of the web - that’s why web graphics need some skilful preparation)
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4 24 or 32 bits per pixel provides thousands or millions of colour choices. (Typical of graphics and games software)
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4 Resolution refers to the density of dots on the screen or printed image and directly affects quality 4 The higher the resolution, the less jagged the image. 4 Resolution is measured in DPI (Dots per Inch) 4 (The printing industry is largely unmetricated and still uses inches because printing measures such as the Point (1 72nd of an inch) do not easily convert to metric units.) 4 The higher the resolution, the better the potential output.
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4 Screens generally operate at around 72-100 dpi 4 Printed images range from 300 to 2400 dpi 4 Resolution affects the file size of an image. 4 The higher the resolution, the bigger the file. 4 The visible resolution is limited to the maximum possible on the output device (screen or printer). 4 No matter how high the resolution of a photograph, it will show at the resolution of your screen or printer.
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4 There are many kinds of graphics file formats and this is a specialised area and a bit complicated. 4 Examples : bmp GIF JPEG TIFF PICT Raw 4 For most applications involving photographic images, use the JPEG file format (Joint Photographic Experts Group) 4 For graphics or paint type files use GIFs (Graphical Interchange Format)
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4 The JPEG format can be used by most applications and all browsers 4 It has very good compression algorithms 4 It stores a good quality image in a remarkably small file with little or no loss of quality 4 JPEG offers 10 quality levels with correspondingly smaller files and greater losses in quality
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4 You should choose a GIF format instead of JPEG when –You have a graphic with only a few colours such as a logo or icon –You want to create an image with some transparent parts for a web page –You want the smallest possible file size with totally lossless compression –You want to combine a few images together into an animation –You want to save text as a graphic
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4 A little knowledge is a dangerous thing! 4 With a little knowledge, you can create files that are so large they are almost unusable 4 With a bit more knowledge you can store the same image in a file that is a fraction of the size 4 With little or no loss of quality 4 You MUST understand this if you are going to use graphics effectively
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4 A standard postcard is 6in by 4in in 8 bit colour (256 colours), the following is true 4 At a resolution of 100 dpi the image is 600 by 400 dots so comprises 240,000 pixels. Each pixel is 1 byte so that’s –240000 bytes (240KB) 4 At a resolution of 300 dpi it becomes 1800 by 1200 dots –2160KB (2MB) That means it is now 9 times as big! 4 At a resolution of 600 dpi it becomes 3600 by 2400 dots –8640KB (8MB) - Now 36 times as big! 4 And on screen you can’t see any difference! 4 Note - for 32 bit colour (millions of colours) the file sizes are 4 times bigger again!
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4 The previous example is for uncompressed files and ignores the fact that some file formats compress the data using very clever algorithms. 4 With a good compression system, file sizes can be significantly reduced with little or no loss of quality. 4 JPEG has compression built in at 10 quality levels but is a “lossy” algorithm. (Some data is gone forever when you compress) 4 GIF compresses files with a “lossless” algorithm and so no quality is lost. 4 When a file has a large number of colours, a GIF will generally create a much larger file than a JPEG
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JPEG Quality 10 File Size 100K JPEG Quality 1 File Size 32KB Not much loss even at the greatest compression
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4 For use in any screen based application such as PowerPoint or the internet, a 72 to 100dpi medium quality JPEG 4 will usually suffice 4 UNLESS –you plan to crop a part of the image, enlarge it and then use it at the larger size. 4 Then –you would increase the original scanning resolution accordingly
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4 Even for images that will eventually be printed, there is little point scanning beyond 150 dpi unless you are producing a very high quality glossy colour magazine (in which case you would use 300dpi.) 4 If you want to enlarge an image then you would scan at correspondingly higher resolution. 4 If necessary, a low resolution image can be reduced in print size to effectively give a higher resolution image on paper –e.g. if you halve the size of a 150 dpi image you have a 300 dpi image. –Laser printers rated as 600 dpi only use 100 dpi in a graphic.
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4 Make sure the scanner glass is clean 4 Put your photo or graphic on the scanner bed. 4 Open Photoshop (or some other bit mapped graphics programme) 4 Choose File / Import/ Twain / Acquire (or something similar) 4 Ask for a prescan (or if it is automatic, wait for the prescan to finish) 4 Crop the area that you want to scan properly 4 Check the settings - use 100dpi for most purposes 4 Press SCAN 4 Save the image as JPEG then choose medium quality 4 Experiment with the same scan at different resolutions and file types if you want to understand this better
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