Understanding Resolution in Digital Photography Printing
To get good results in digital photography printing it helps to know
how pictures are made up. Every digital image is made up of individual
dots called pixels.
This is the same process as many printed images, televisions and
even the monitor you are looking at right now. Look closely at that
monitor screen, closer, closer still . . . you’ll see the screen is
made up of lots of tiny dots.
As you move away from the screen your eye can no longer see the
individual dots. They blend together to form a complete picture. Think
of each dot on your computer monitor as one pixel.
My goal is to explain how resolution works. It’s
fairly straightforward and I’ll be as jargon free as I can. It sounds
boring but a basic understanding will help you improve your digital
photography printing, I promise!
The resolution of any image is a way of saying how many pixels go
across, and how many pixels go from top to bottom. If you were to count
the dots (or “pixels” as we’re now calling them!) from left to right on
your monitor and find there are 1024 of them, then you count how many
are up and down and you find there are 768 pixels from top to bottom.
Now for a little bit of maths: The resolution of your screen is:
number of horizontal pixels x vertical pixels
in our example above it is:
1024 x 768 = 786,432
- This is then divided by 1 million (makes 0.786432)
- rounded up (makes 0.8)
- and expressed as megapixels (makes 0.8 megapixels)!
Resolution is often expressed in another way – by stating how many pixels there are per inch
(or "ppi"). This is important in digital photography printing because
it determines print quality. The more pixels you can cram into every
inch, the better the print will be.
Lets go back to our computer monitor. If your monitor
has 1024 pixels across, and the width of the screen is 12 inches
(that’s a standard 15” monitor – 15” is the diagonal screen size). The
maths:
1024 ÷ 12 = 85ppi
The more ppi you have, the smaller the dots are. Lets say we make
each pixel on our screen half size. We can then fit twice as many of
them into the same space:
2048 ÷ 12 = 170ppi
The picture on the screen would look much sharper and
you would have to get a lot closer to your monitor screen before you
could make them out individually.
The holy grail for good digital photography printing is 300ppi. With
300 pixels crammed into every inch of your image the naked eye cannot
make out the individual pixels. The image appears beautifully crisp!
Suppose you’re getting into digital photography and buy a digital
camera with 0.8 megapixels. It would be perfect for taking pictures to
view on your monitor. But what about printing . . . hmmm sadly not
enough ppi. The biggest print you would be able to produce would be
(math again - last time, I promise!):
1024 ÷ 300ppi = 3.4”
So our print would be 3.4 inches wide. Not very big, is it?
My recommendation for the absolute minimum number of pixels needed for a good digital photography print is 2 megapixels.
These cameras have sensors with around 1600 pixels across. They can
produce reasonably good quality digital photography printing up to six
inches wide – that’s a standard snapshot print size.
The table below shows how many pixels you will need for good quality digital photography printing
| Megapixels: (MP) |
Quality prints up to this size: |
| minimum of 2MP |
6” x 4” |
| minimum of 3MP |
7” x 5” |
| minimum of 6MP |
10” x 8” |
| minimum of 8MP |
12” x 10” |
Note: Prints are determined by the number of “Dots Per Inch”, or
“DPI”. Printers use small dots of ink to make their pictures up. The
difference between dots and pixels is meaningless. For now just
consider a “dot” to be the same as a “pixel”.
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