Scanning Old Photos in Photshop CS
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atct86
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Scanning Old Photos in Photshop CS
I have en Epson Perfection 4990 Photo scanner, and am scanning old family images.
Im scanning at 800dpi at the highest jpeg quality and end up with 8-12mb images.
However when i rotate/edit in photoshop, the file size enlarges by alot?
Why is this happening?
Why dont they stay the original size?
Does this mean the JPEG is being compressed again and a reduction in quality is taking place?
Also, some general scanning and PS tips would be appreciated.
Im scanning at 800dpi at the highest jpeg quality and end up with 8-12mb images.
However when i rotate/edit in photoshop, the file size enlarges by alot?
Why is this happening?
Why dont they stay the original size?
Does this mean the JPEG is being compressed again and a reduction in quality is taking place?
Also, some general scanning and PS tips would be appreciated.
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320b Lacie Triple Interface Extreme Drive
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davidspalding
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If you're referring to the .PSD file, it will change size depending on layers, etc. I'm still using 5.5 (CS2 ordered), though. Don't scan into a JPEG, do it either as a TIFF, or straight into a .PSD file. These are both "lossless" formats.
Somewhere on these forums, someone linked to an Adobe article about performance tuning for systems with > 1 gb RAM. If you search Adobe, you can probably find some good tips on scanning. Also, Googling for Adobe tips will yield more than a few very good sites with tips and tutorials.
If you're new to Photoshop, DEFINITELY do the tutorial that comes with it. It covers lots of the basics of the tools.
Somewhere on these forums, someone linked to an Adobe article about performance tuning for systems with > 1 gb RAM. If you search Adobe, you can probably find some good tips on scanning. Also, Googling for Adobe tips will yield more than a few very good sites with tips and tutorials.
If you're new to Photoshop, DEFINITELY do the tutorial that comes with it. It covers lots of the basics of the tools.
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atct86
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i am doing JPEG mainly for storage size. i really cant deal with 70MB plus images.
I have
200+ old photos
1800 35mm slides
300 2.25" slides
All which i think i want to scan as JPEGS
(The jpegs are the files that change size when resaved in photoshop)
I have
200+ old photos
1800 35mm slides
300 2.25" slides
All which i think i want to scan as JPEGS
(The jpegs are the files that change size when resaved in photoshop)
2.2ghz MacBook Pro
320b Lacie Triple Interface Extreme Drive
Dell 20.1" Widescreen - 2007WFP
320b Lacie Triple Interface Extreme Drive
Dell 20.1" Widescreen - 2007WFP
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davidspalding
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No, no, no, trust me on this. Scan in Photoshop native format, do your basic sizing, rotating, color corrections, etc, THEN save as a JPEG.
See, JPEG is a lossy format, so you may lose information immediately on scanning ... which defeats some of Photoshop's power.
To answer your original questions:
See, JPEG is a lossy format, so you may lose information immediately on scanning ... which defeats some of Photoshop's power.
To answer your original questions:
- Because it's a JPEG.
- See #1.
- Yes.
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tfflivemb2
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AlphaKilo470
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By following the advice given by the last few posts, you'd essentially be adding a premium to quality in the beginning in order to make up for quality loss in the end. By starting out with a high resolution and high quality format, you'll have more quality to be able to sacrifice until things become noticable.
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