Peter Tinson
Newbie
This is available for download from http://www.epson-europe.com/ under support, Digital Photo Device, RD-1, driver and software downloads.
Peter
Peter
pfogle said:Can someone please tell me what the purpose of the interpolation is? Is it just for smoother transitions on large prints?
jlw said:Basically, yes (although it's also useful for sending files to moronic printers who say "You won't get good quality unless it's 300 dots per inch." Use of the phrase "dots per inch" in connection with pixel dimensions is always a warning sign that the user doesn't know what he's talking about.)
jlw said:Epson says that its interpolation technique retains more edge sharpness than the bicubic interpolation used in Photoshop (e.g.) That's plausible -- it should be possible to tailor an interpolation algorithm to a specific sensor array and get better results than a one-size-fits-all version -- so I'll be interested to try this and see if it proves out.
lightwriter said:Could you elaborate on this statement. Not sure what you really mean. Are you referring to printer dpi vs. display ppi?
jlw said:-- Pixel "pitch" (in units per inch) is meaningless when talking about an image itself: pixels don't have any specific size until you print them. So when somebody tells me s/he needs a "300 dpi" image file, I don't know whether I need to supply a 300x300-pixel image that can be printed at a size of 1 inch square, or a 3600x3600-pixel image that can be printed at a size of a foot square, or what.
No offense taken. I figured you were on to something of value. Very informative. I knew about this but keep "forgeting" b/c as you said a lot of people use the terms liberaly. One final question though as am I still a bit confused. If one needs 1.4x as many pixels as dots to prevent moire and someone asks for a 300 dpi image - wouldn't you take the 3600x3600 pixel image and divide by 1.4 first and then by 300 which gives an image 8.57 inches square?
Thanks for the info. Any advise on printing with an inkjet - I have a Canon i9900 13"x19"? Never really tried to print that size as I don't have any images that large at 300dpi 😉
Off to bed.
Thanks
lightwriter said:One final question though as am I still a bit confused. If one needs 1.4x as many pixels as dots to prevent moire and someone asks for a 300 dpi image - wouldn't you take the 3600x3600 pixel image and divide by 1.4 first and then by 300 which gives an image 8.57 inches square?