300dpi Camera?
JWP
•
Senior Member
•
Posts: 2,752
Tom29 - do this............
Your camera shoots at 300 dpi and ANY dpi all at the same time. Take one of your images from camera and open it up in Adobe PS or PSE. Go to "image size" and uncheck resample image, leaving constrain proportions checked. In resolution type in 300 dpi. Now you have your 300dpi image from camera. Nothing has really changed except the image size. I have them set to inches. Same file size etc.
tom29
wrote:
imbsysop
wrote:
mamallama
wrote:
imbsysop
wrote:
mamallama
wrote:
tom29
wrote:
Does anyone know if or when Canon will be coming out with a digital
camera that finally outputs at 300dpi instead of 180dpi?
tom29:
You have gotten a lot of responses regarding how inappropriate your
question is but here is a simple explanation of the situation.
Insofar as the resolution of the camera is concerned, all that
matters is the number of pixels (dots, if you will) across and the
number of pixels down. Your printing software will distribute those
pixels across and down to create an image of the particular size
you set. Of course, the larger the image, the less dots per inch
(dpi) you will have. (Imagine a window screen that you can squeeze
and stretch and how the size of the openings get smaller as you
squeeze).
I hope this simple explanation is clear.
To answer your question, virtually all Canon cameras can now
produce 300 dpi output images. The 8 megapixel Pro1 with 3264 x
2448 pixels can produce an 10" x 8" image with 300 dpi. 300 dpi
images for most other Canon digicams would have to be smaller.
although yr explanation is absolutely correct you are obscuring it
again by putting out that last paragraph .. Cameras NEVER put
out a "DPI" image they output an XbyY pixelmap (the dpi value given
is useless) .. The dpi is a user applied & choosen pixel density
for printing AND the exact connotation is PPI (pixels per inch).
The DPI definition is purely printer based aka a 300PPI choice to
define print size & printed on a printer at 300 DPI will yield an
absolutely lousy print ...
Even the Adobe people do not seem to get this "nuance" ...
FWIW
imbsyop:
You are semantically correct. In my effort to simplify the
explanation I did cloud the issue somewhat. A more careful
description should read:
To answer your question, tom29, virtually all Canon cameras can now
produce image files that will print 300 dpi images. The 8 megapixel
Pro1 can produce a 3264 x 2448 pixel image file from which a 10" x
8" image with 300 dpi can be printed. The 300 dpi images made using
the files produced by Canon digicams with less megapixels would
have to be smaller.
With all of our explanations, I hope tom29 isn't more confused.
I hope not
The problem is, that although a lot of people consider it to be
only "semantics", people not wanting to stick to the correct
definitions. It could avoid all the mixup The presumed
pixelcount for printsize calculations should refered to as PPI
while the printing resolution remains at DPI ... This way it will
never cause discrepancies ..
Wow! I should really check this forum more often! Thanks for all of
your responses!! Great info.
My original question stemmed from the fact that I always find
myself having to "bump up" the resolution of my photos if I am
using them for a print ad. They only come into Photoshop at 180dpi,
not 300dpi which is what I need. I understand that bumping them up"
from 180dpi creates good results that are not pixelated, but
bumping them up from a 72dpi image would not look so sharp (just to
clairify a previous post). I just thought that if most people have
the desire to PRINT their digital images in the future, shouldn't
Canon come out with a camera that outputs at the standard PRINTER
resolution instead of us having to bump them up all the time? Does
anyone know if the EOS 20D offers this resolution?
Thanks again!
Cheers!
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