ampguy
Veteran
I have some ~ 1MP images that are fine in 4x6 or OK in 8x10. However, I envision getting a big noisy at my target 12x18 or 16x20 ultimate target.
I'm don't buy into the need for the ~320pixels/per inch, as I have some great ~6-8MP JPGs that are on my walls at 20" x 30" and look great.
So do I need photoshop or will Elements do this interpolation.
A few of the images have some visible noise, but I can't seem to download noise ninja, anyone have a link?
Thanks.
I'm don't buy into the need for the ~320pixels/per inch, as I have some great ~6-8MP JPGs that are on my walls at 20" x 30" and look great.
So do I need photoshop or will Elements do this interpolation.
A few of the images have some visible noise, but I can't seem to download noise ninja, anyone have a link?
Thanks.
Pickett Wilson
Veteran
I use Genuine Fractals to uprez. It's a plug-in for pretty much any version of Photoshop, including Elements I believe. Works MUCH better than Photoshop alone.
sojournerphoto
Veteran
or use qimage for upres and print
mike
mike
ampguy
Veteran
Thanks, I might get elements and try genuine fractals. I am also going to print 4x6's and photograph them with a 10mp camera and see how that works.
benmacphoto
Well-known
I would highly recommend Genuine Fractals. I've taken Hasselblad negatives and was only limited by my printer of 64 inches wide. I was able to get them to 80 inches and still would have had a great print, no artifacting at all.
ampguy
Veteran
Thanks
Thanks
I'll be working with 8-bit JPGs and Elements 7, do you see any limitations there?
Thanks
I'll be working with 8-bit JPGs and Elements 7, do you see any limitations there?
I would highly recommend Genuine Fractals. I've taken Hasselblad negatives and was only limited by my printer of 64 inches wide. I was able to get them to 80 inches and still would have had a great print, no artifacting at all.
benmacphoto
Well-known
Genuine Fractals 6, which is the most recent version, is compatible with Elements 4 and up. So no limitations there. I only used 8 bit TIFF files, which at gray scale 64x64" and 180 DPI were about 250mb.
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