Am I the only one posting here??!!!!
Just following up on my posting regarding text in photoshop and making it as clear as possible....
We "inherited" a project at work (another e-com bites the dust!). When I cut the graphics to integrate their design into this site, I saw that the PSD file given me was huge in dimensions. This gd had given a navigation layout which was on the order of 1200px X 200px. I then resized it.
I cant remember the clarity of the text or not, but is it common practice for GD's to oversize their work and then shrink it back down? does this lend itself to sharper images?????
Brian Farkas posted this at 00:10 — 2nd March 2001.
They have: 1,015 posts
Joined: Apr 1999
Usually not- in fact, if you oversize the site and shrink it later, you may end up losing some quality as I believe photoshop automatically "blurs" the image if you use the resize tool. However, if you start at 300 dpi and then move down to 72 dpi in the image properties box, I don't know if that would be as much of a problem...
Personally, I just design the UI for the size of the screen it's designed to be displayed on. For most sites this will mean ~ 760 pixels wide (in order to be compatible with all 800x600 monitors)
Brian
doren posted this at 05:33 — 10th March 2001.
They have: 100 posts
Joined: Sep 1999
Think of it this way.
You have 4 pixels. When you resize the image to 50% Photoshop has to figure out what color to make the one pixel that is the result (remember 50% width & 50% witdth = 4 to 1).
If there is, for example, an edge where a white field meets a red field you will have subtle bluring. And that a best case shrink.
If you are going from 3 pixels to 1 pixel think of the gymnastics Photoshop must do. And of course if you go from 100% to 99% Photoshop must decide which few pixels to delete and which to average.
Same thing when you are enlarging and image. The gist of the answer is ALWAYS when you can, create images at the size they will be used in the end result.
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