Close
This post was deleted. Reason: replaced. MD5: a29f376e533dccdc5934f123f8c7b074
This post belongs to a parent post.
This post has a child post. (post #407591)


Edit | Respond

it's a RAW scan, it's going to be very high-res.
It's a raw scan but the resolution is outrageous. You always downsize them to something more manageable around the 400-300dpi during or after all the filter and screening.

Was gonna mention too but forgot that you'll need to "actually" make sure it's truly a raw scan, not a raw scans preprocessed already by the scanning software.
aoie_emesai said:
It's a raw scan but the resolution is outrageous. You always downsize them to something more manageable around the 400-300dpi during or after all the filter and screening.

Was gonna mention too but forgot that you'll need to "actually" make sure it's truly a raw scan, not a raw scans preprocessed already by the scanning software.
OK...sorry...I will do better next time. Do you want to me to re-upload a new one without using the filter and downsize it a little bit?
No, meant downsizing as in after you finish the screening. Keep it at your current size.

Raw is as in absolutely nothing has been done to the scanned image. Simply scan it with no scanning software preprocessed, then post it.

your raw scan should look more like this post #182510
your are nice guy!whatever thanks a lot.
150 ~ 300 "LPI" is the maximum resolution of normal printing method. However, LPI doesn't directory equal to dpi, so 300~450 dpi can be tolerable range depending on its printing method. Though I resize all my scans down into 300~350 dpi always, because I hate blurry meaninglessly huge images (scanning itself is 450~600 dpi)