Bev wrote:
<A point to keep in mind for us duffers - the image cannot be made any more
clearer than at the resolution it has been taken at, in the first place.
So - if you have a blurry small image, when enlarged, it is a blurry large
image.
Options in most printing software allow you to enlarge the images and retain
clarity; a simple one to look for is 'print to paper size.'>
Agreed, you can't improve a blurry image like this, but if you have a small
sharp image, which you want to look at on screen, it will pixelate if you
go larger than 100%. If you want detail on screen then this method works and
you can zoom in on detail. The enlargement I described was from a
professional photographer, who prints a 10x6 inch 6 megapixel image sharp at
100% on screen as 36x24 inch sharp posters. I think he knows what he's
talking about. Not many of us have printers capable of printing on paper of
that size.
And as I said, I used the method to enlarge and save the image for a cross
stitch chart, so wasn't printing it, and the detail I got in the chart was
much better than anything I could get from the original saved image.
Jean in Poole, Dorset, UK
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