A certain level of exclusivity is usually guaranteed. Cost varies depending on how image will be used (circulation size, production medium, etc.) and cannot be used in any way other without permission. Rights-protected: Images are purchased for a specific use.Royalty-free images cost less than rights-protected images, however you have no control over who else uses that image. Royalty-free: Purchased images can be used as many times as you want and for almost any purpose.Images should have a resolution of 300 dpi (400 dpi if the image includes text) at their final layout size. Read all the "fine print" prior to purchase as it will determine price, color, file size, copyrights, resolution and quality.If in doubt, overestimate the size you will need. Know what size the image will be in your design layout and purchase appropriately.You have more control if you do the color conversion yourself-see our RGB - CMYK information page for important instructions on getting the results you want. When we receive RGB images, we do a standard-value conversion to CMYK, which may not be perfectly to your liking.To print on a four-color printing press, all RGB images need to be converted to CMYK. Most scanners save images in the RGB color space.File formats like GIF or JPEG are best for web usage, as they compress color and pixel resolution to enhance transmission speed.Save your scanned images as lossless TIF or EPS files to best preserve color and sharpness.This will allow you to print the 5 x 7.5" image without loss of crispness or quality. Multiply the magnification factor (in this case, 2.5) by the desired DPI of the final image (in this case, 300 dpi) to get the dpi at which you will need to scan the original image (750 dpi) (2.5 x 300 = 750).This is an 2.5x enlargement, or 250% of the original image (5 / 2 = 2.5).Start with a 2 x 3" image with no text that will display at 5 x 7.5" in the layout.
ONLINE IMAGE CONVERTER DPI PROFESSIONAL
If you need to enlarge anything more than 300%, it is best to contact your local service provider for a professional scan.Increase the scanning resolution (300 dpi if image doesn't have text 400 dpi if it includes text) by the same percentage you will be enlarging the original image.
ONLINE IMAGE CONVERTER DPI HOW TO
Before you scan, you need to know what size your image will be in your design layout.Artists, photographers and other users who need critical color accuracy and quality control often are best served with a professional drum scan. No weight should ever be set on top of a flatbed scanner, as it will warp the glass bed and cause undesired color shadows. Most home and office users use flatbed scanners. If we indicate that some of your images have low resolution, they may not look bad on your monitor but will likely print blurry or jagged. Recommended minimum resolution for printing is 300 dpi computer monitors generally have a display setting of 72 dpi or 96 dpi.Resolution can only be improved by decreasing the image size, or by recapturing the image at a higher quality setting. The settings used during the original "capture" of an image (ie: scanning, digital camera, etc) determine its base resolution.Low resolution images print fuzzy, jagged and blurry.Example: a 2 x 2" image at 300 dpi (acceptable) enlarged to 4 x 4" has a new resolution of 150 dpi (unacceptable). Enlarge an image, the resolution decreases reduce an image, the resolution increases. Resolution and image size are inversely proportional to each other.Images which include text should be 400 dpi at the final size in the layout.Images should be 300 dpi (dots per inch) at the final size in the layout.