Photography Information

Digital Image Files - Megapixels, Megabytes, or DPI?


When I promised readers that I was going to do an article on this topic I was scared. For two reasons - firstly, it's a HUGE subject. I get lots of questions about it, and I see a fair bit of misunderstanding about it. Secondly, there are already a lot of good articles about it on the web, like this one on luminous-landscape.com.

But I know that trawling the internet for technical information is not your idea of fun. That's my job! So here's my attempt at summing this up quickly for you:

DPI - Dots Per Inch

The most common question I get on this topic is, "My client / boss / nephew has asked me to send an image at a size of 300 dpi. What does that mean"?

The answer: Not much.

You see, DPI stands for Dots Per Inch. It's a useful measure of image resolution (in other words, how much information is resolved in the picture). But if you don't know the image size in inches (or feet, miles, centimetres, millimitres, or some other measure of size), then the amount of dots per inch doesn't mean much.

Using DPI to measure size is like using km/h to measure distance: "How far is it from here to the beach?""Oh, about 60 miles per hour". For this to make sense the answer would need to be "about 10 minutes at 60 miles per hour".

Likewise, the size of an image needs to be expressed as, say, "six by six inches at 300dpi".

Different resolutions are used for different purposes. The most common are 72 or 75 dpi for screen viewing (Web use or PowerPoint presentations) and 300 dpi for printing.

OK, so to give an example - 1 inch by 1 inch, 300 dpi image would be 300 pixels by 300 pixels in size. A 2 by 2 inch image at 300 dpi would be 600 by 600 pixels in size. Here's where megapixels and megabytes come into it. Mega!

Megapixels

The term megapixels is usually used to describe the output size of digital camera images. For example, the Canon Ixus 50 produces images which are 2592 x 1944 pixels in size. Multiply these numbers together and you get 5,038,848 - just over 5 million. Hence this is described as a "5 megapixel" camera.

The last byte

On a couple of occasions, I've sent an image of a certain size to someone and they've said, "that's no good, we need a 10 megabyte file". Now, this I'm sure they were well-intentioned but they were also a little misguided.

The size in bytes (or megabytes - millions of bytes) represents how much storage the image takes up on your computer. This depends on all sorts of things, mainly the bit depth of the image and the file format - for example TIFF or JPEG.

So what should I do?

To avoid confusion, when specifying the file size you need, use pixels.

How do you work out how many pixels you need? Well, that's why I started this discussion with DPI. Work out the largest size you're going to want to reproduce the image, in inches; and the resolution - for example 72 dpi for or 300dpi for most print applications. Then just multiply the size in inches by the DPI figure you came up with.

Example: I want to reproduce the image A4 size in a printed magazine. A4 is 210mm x 297mm, or about 8.3 x 11.7 inches. The magazine needs artwork at 300dpi, so:

8.3 x 300 = 2490 and 11.7 x 300 = 3510 so I need an image sized about 2490 x 3510 pixels (about 8.7 megapixels)

By the way: 1 inch = 2.54 centimetres. Did you know you can also do conversions on google? Try it yourself.

Happy pixelling!

Steven Pam is a digital commercial photographer based in Melbourne, Australia, specializing in people, aviation and music photography. http://www.stevenpam.com.au


MORE RESOURCES:

Still Life, Love Life: The Passion of the Camera
New York Times
So it is with “The Original Copy: Photography of Sculpture, 1839 to Today,” which opens at the museum on Sunday. A blockbuster the new show is not. ...
'New Photography 2010' Coming to MoMANew York Times

all 6 news articles »


Daily Mail

Ansel Adams Or Not? The Answer's Worth Millions
NPR
Norsigian enlisted a team of photography and handwriting experts to prove his claim. He even got a meteorologist who, looking at one of the negatives, ...
Is unknown photographer Earl Brooks behind mystery of '£128m Ansel Adams ...Daily Mail
If not Ansel Adams, then who took garage-sale photos?CNN
Photo News Of The Week July 30, 2010Adorama (press release)
Gawker -Independent -AOL News
all 40 news articles »


Photography business opens in Honeoye Falls
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
Milestone Mill is a full-service portrait studio and print gallery that also offers photography classes, a camera club and a used equipment co-op. ...

and more »


New York Times (blog)

When Photography and National Security Meet
New York Times (blog)
These stories are becoming increasingly common as authorities seek — often against their own stated regulations — to smother photography in public places ...

and more »


Steamboat briefs: CNCC offers photography, consumer issues classes
Steamboat Pilot
Steamboat Springs — Colorado Northwestern Community College is offering a digital photography class with instructor Greg Pieraccini from 6 to 7:30 pm ...

and more »


OregonLive.com (blog)

Dance Resources: Photography by Manny Minjarez
OregonLive.com (blog)
Manny talked about action photography and said, "You have to do repetitions. One after the other. You do it once and then, let's do it again. ...



Leonard Nimoy's Photography: Let Your Secret Nerd Rejoice!
NPR (blog)
For the past decade or so, Nimoy has been focusing his artistic efforts on photography. Although much of his previous work involves a lot of skin, ...
Actor has sitters pose as selves they wish to beBerkshire Eagle

all 3 news articles »


Blurb photography competition: Voting now open
NetworkWorld.com
Award winners' books will become part of the permanent collections at the International Centre for Photography, the Annenberg Space for Photography and the ...
Photography Book Now Opens People's Choice VotingPR Newswire (press release)

all 12 news articles »



New York Times

MASS MoCA presents first major museum exhibition of Leonard Nimoy's photography
Albany Times Union
Nimoy is 79, and the most public thing he does anymore is photography. Of all the things he has done, it was his first love. And he has done a lot: acted ...
'Star Trek' Actor Leonard Nimoy Debuts Photography ExhibitTheCelebrityCafe.com
Leonard Nimoy Photography Show Opens at MASS MoCA on August 1CultureMob (blog)
Leonard Nimoy on His Photography, Plus Fringe Producer Says He Wants Nimoy ...TrekWeb.com
Trek Today -New York Times
all 8 news articles »

Google News

Home | Site Map

Powered By: Free Work At Home Business Opportunity!

© 2006