With the one hot thread of late, perhaps there is no appetite for this, but as an engineer the subject facinates me. It is a formidable challenge to take a limited sample of data and try to recreate the original image. Purists were highly critical of digital music when it first came out ... and perhaps some still are, but one cannot argue that with correct sampling, Dolby and the like that there are not some pretty spectacular results. Digital sampling to recreate an analog output is the game in audio, and now in digital photography.
So if you are up to it, the following images have been downrezed from the original 5.5" width and 72 ppi, to 1.75" at 72 ppi, and then uprezed back to the original size and at 72 dpi. The interpolation method used for both the downrez and the up rez were the same. In the case of the Qimage process, the downrezed image was saved in TIF and then convered to JPG at the final step. For Photoshop the image was not saved until the final uprez step had been compled. So both methods only resulted in one JPG save.
The first image is the original, which was chosen to include gradual curves, and soft transitions to test the various methods - a drop of water splashing and creating ripples. If you wish to post your preferences in order, and there are sufficient responses it may be interesting to see what the poll concludes. There are a total of six methods; three from Qimage and three from Photoshop (including Bicubic Smoother). The order is random by draw. One can see some obvious differences expecially from the original in sharpness and contrast. No corrections were made to either in the process.
Here's hoping I get actual images to show this time!
Original:
Image A
Image B
Image C
Image D
Image E
Image F
So if you are up to it, the following images have been downrezed from the original 5.5" width and 72 ppi, to 1.75" at 72 ppi, and then uprezed back to the original size and at 72 dpi. The interpolation method used for both the downrez and the up rez were the same. In the case of the Qimage process, the downrezed image was saved in TIF and then convered to JPG at the final step. For Photoshop the image was not saved until the final uprez step had been compled. So both methods only resulted in one JPG save.
The first image is the original, which was chosen to include gradual curves, and soft transitions to test the various methods - a drop of water splashing and creating ripples. If you wish to post your preferences in order, and there are sufficient responses it may be interesting to see what the poll concludes. There are a total of six methods; three from Qimage and three from Photoshop (including Bicubic Smoother). The order is random by draw. One can see some obvious differences expecially from the original in sharpness and contrast. No corrections were made to either in the process.
Here's hoping I get actual images to show this time!
Original:
Image A
Image B
Image C
Image D
Image E
Image F