Comments: 13
lamoni73 [2013-06-30 21:20:28 +0000 UTC]
nice job
π: 0 β©: 1
merrygrannyde [2011-03-30 05:05:00 +0000 UTC]
Beautiful backgrounds
π: 0 β©: 1
alzartz [2011-03-11 08:10:05 +0000 UTC]
Awesome!! You must have enjoyed making these!!! Very Beautiful work!!
π: 0 β©: 1
DarksealStudios [2011-03-11 06:44:34 +0000 UTC]
They ARE some GREAT images though!!! (forgot to add that)
π: 0 β©: 1
DarksealStudios [2011-03-11 06:43:54 +0000 UTC]
Dpi, not ppi...... and it's only relevant when you print... no? At 2400x3000 you could call it 1000 dpi, as long as your printing it at 2.4 x 3 inches.............. but I understand that not everyone gets that....
π: 0 β©: 1
DarksealStudios In reply to emmaalvarez [2011-03-12 01:37:10 +0000 UTC]
What is a ppi then? Dpi is "dots per inch"
2400x3000 will yield a great print at 600dpi at 5"x4", and a good enough print at 300dpi at 10"x8"...
But if you want to do posters, for example, at 600dpi (what most printing places use, even most newish home printers) you have to think bigger!!
48"x36" @ 600dpi.... 28800x21600 !!!! That would be great specs for printing, it all depends on the "i" (inches) in your dpi, ppi (points?, pixels?, pandas?, pretend?, what's the p for?)
π: 0 β©: 1
emmaalvarez In reply to DarksealStudios [2011-03-12 09:27:33 +0000 UTC]
From Wikipedia: "Some digital file formats record a DPI value, or more commonly a PPI (pixels per inch) value, which is to be used when printing the image. This number lets the printer know the intended size of the image, or in the case of scanned images, the size of the original scanned object. For example, a bitmap image may measure 1,000 Γ 1,000 pixels, a resolution of one megapixel. If it is labeled as 250 PPI, that is an instruction to the printer to print it at a size of 4 Γ 4 inches. Changing the PPI to 100 in an image editing program would tell the printer to print it at a size of 10Γ10 inches. " ([link] )
Dpi is a measure of the quality that a printer or a monitor has (not the image). An image simply has a size in pixels, and a quality that depends simply on image resolution (how detailed and clear it is). PPi is a number that tells the printer at what size it must print. So am image prepared at 300 ppi or 200 even at 150 can be printed in quality directly, without the need of setting this.
π: 0 β©: 0