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Posted
michael_layton said:

what resolution should I scan a 3x4 photo, and likewise negative, and slides so I can present them on the big screen w/o the pixels showing?

 

Are you creating a slide or just a file for a powerpoint type presentation. If you're going to have a lab make a slide from a digital file better make that file a whopper. Say 50megs+ at 4000dpi. If it's just for a powerpoint presentation 150-300dpi should work at 8x10 file size. PM me if you would like some help. thumbs_up.gif

Posted

I got confused pretty quick with the responses. I'll rephrase it being more specific.

 

I am scanning actual physical slides, negs, and photos on a flatbed scanner with a transparancy/slide/neg adaptor (HP Scanjet 3970) into files that I will paste onto a powerpoint presentation which will then be shown on a lecture hall sized screen.

 

What DPI should I use for each (or all).

 

Flowchart:

(photo,slide,neg)---(hp scanjet 3970)---(file)---(powerpoint)---(screen)---(audience)---(memory)---(obscurity or legend)

Posted

Computer monitors (digital projectors) max out at around 100 dpi, so scanning at a resolution higher than this is overkill. Pay attention to your image size (dimensions) because that's what will keep your images from getting "blocky".

Posted
Figger_Eight said:

Computer monitors (digital projectors) max out at around 100 dpi, so scanning at a resolution higher than this is overkill. Pay attention to your image size (dimensions) because that's what will keep your images from getting "blocky".

 

So you are saying, don't "stretch" the image to fit the powerpoint slide borers?

 

If that's what your saying, then wouldn't scanning at a higher dpi solve that problem? IF not, how can I enlarge the photos w/o stetching there borders so they fill out the screen?

Posted

If you have software that can resize the image (Photoshop) and retain the quality of the picture, that would work. Lower level image editing software will make it look crappy if you do it this way. If you don't have that - yeah...you have to scan it in at a higher dpi to get a bigger picture.

Posted

Scan to the size of your powerpoint holes @ 72 dpi first. If you get artifacts, errrr pixelation, then 150 dpi will do the trick. If you're going to resize a file in Pshop a good rule is to never jpg a jpg. Start with a tiff instead.

Posted

When resizing photos with something like paint shop pro, what is the minimum KB count for the images to still look good?

 

I'm in the process of putting together a slide show and all of the images are at least 6MB or more. This is way to big for my computer to deal with. How far should this be compressd?

 

Thanks in advance.

 

Jason

Posted
Jason_Martin said:

When resizing photos with something like paint shop pro, what is the minimum KB count for the images to still look good?

 

I'm in the process of putting together a slide show and all of the images are at least 6MB or more. This is way to big for my computer to deal with. How far should this be compressd?

 

Thanks in advance.

 

Jason

 

What does the filename for those pictures end in?

If it's "tif" or "bmp", then the problem is that the images are not being compressed. With a high-quality "jpg" encoding, the sizes of the files are reduced by up to 90%, but the image quality is nearly equivalent.

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