Vacation Picture Tips for using Photoshop and Scanning
Released on = March 9, 2007, 1:31 pm
Press Release Author = Arlene Wites/The Art Instittue of Fort Lauderdale
Industry = Education
Press Release Summary = Here are some tips from a Photoshop expert
Press Release Body = Fort Lauderdale, FL -- Want to scan a vacation picture and send it to a friend, relative or use for your work? Looking for a professional way to approach this situation? Here are some tips for just this purpose by The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale Photography Instructor Valan Evers.
A good photography scan is the start. Know how you want to use the image. This determines file size. If it is only going to be onscreen, a small file is ok. Small is relative. We are talking here about a picture 8 X 6 inches at 72 pixels per inch (screen resolution) this equals 729 Kilobytes. It is a healthy size for onscreen work. If you want to make a print, it should have at least twice as many pixels per inch: a good size file to print is 8 X 6 inches at 144 pixels per inch, or a 2.85 Megabyte file. (There are little more than a thousand Kilobytes in a Megabyte.)
When you scan a photograph and use Photoshop, the total file size is the only number that is important. It will be a number in the info tab. You can raise the number by raising or lowering the resolution. (Usually there is a resolution tab with presets to choose from) Be certain to capture enough pixels. You never want a file smaller than 500 Kilobytes. If you want to make a print and send an email of the picture, scan it at the print size and make a duplicate of it. Reduce the picture in Photoshop by lowering the resolution to 72 pixels per inch.
Before you make any color corrections on the picture, make a duplicate of it first. Always have a clean original! If you need to brighten or darken the image, do it in Photoshop. It has much better options and previews than the scanner software.
Finally, always name your picture something descriptive. \"My cool picture\" is not as good a name as \"Alaskan Sunset\".
Evers is an 18-year faculty member of The Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale and author of "MetaCreations Painter 5.5," published by Prentice Hall. This is the only structured Painter tutorial book of its type. Evers teaches electronic applications in Photoshop and Advanced Photoshop, Digital Illustration, and Color Management. She created the "MetaCreations Painter 5.5" book because, as she says, "there doesn't exist any tutorial information for this program." She adds, "when a teacher can't find the information she needs, she writes a book!"
Web Site = http://ww.aifl.edu
Contact Details = 1799 SE 17 Street Ft. Lauderdale FL 33316 1.800.275.7603