Resolution Digital vs. Analog
Resolution Digital vs. Analog
Resolution Digital vs. Analog
Human Vision
Our vision is incapable of discriminating detail below a certain level. This
varies from individual to individual, but more or less this point is at about 200
dots per inch. When an image is composed of dots smaller than this they
appear to the eye as continuous tone. Every photograph and every image that
you see in every book, magazine, calendar and art reproduction is comprised
of dots of ink, at resolutions typically ranging from 70 to 300+ dots per inch.
Standard screen resolution is 72 dpi and 300 dpi for print.
Digital images, whether derived directly from a digital camera or from a film
scanner, obey the same laws. If the resolution used to make a print is too
low we will see the dots, just as you sometimes do in a photograph
reproduced on low quality newsprint.
What you end up seeing are the pixels. These are the discrete elements used
to capture the image created by the camera or scanner lens system on the
device's imaging chip. They are in effect the equivalent of the grain found in
silver-based films or the dye clouds found in colour negative and transparency
films. The problem comes when trying to understand the relationship between
what is captured and what ends up on a print.
The Pixel
In digital imaging, a pixel (picture element) is the smallest item of
information in an image. Pixels are normally arranged in a 2-
dimensional grid, and are often represented using dots or squares.
Each pixel is a sample of an original image, where more samples
typically provide more-accurate representations of the original.
A megapixel (MP) is 1 million pixels, and is a term used not only for the
number of pixels in an image, but also to express the number of image
sensor elements of digital cameras or the number of display elements of
digital displays.
For example, the canon 5D Mark II with an array of 3744 x 5616 sensor
elements is commonly said to have "21.1 megapixels" (3744 x 5616 =
= 21,026,304)
This box above shows the Image Size dialog box in Photoshop. An image
from the canon 5D Mark II will produce a 60.2 MB file at 8-bit.
The above image was photographed with a Nikon digital SLR, the D70 (6
megapixel camera). The information at the top of the box tells us that the
camera took an image that is 3,008 pixels wide by 2,000 pixels high. The size
of the image is 17.2 Megabytes. The document size is for an image that is
25.47 cm wide by 16.93 cm high and that the resolution of this image will be
300 pixels per inch.
If you were to now change any one of the values for Width, Height or
Resolution you would simultaneously change the other two. For example lets
say you wanted a 60 cm wide print, the height would become 39.89 cm and
the resolution would become 127 ppi as seen below.
Bicubic interpolation uses the original pixel and 16 of the surrounding pixels
to determine what color the new pixels will become.
Nearest Neighbor interpolation simply takes the original pixel and multiplies it
by however much you are increasing the image size
Bilinear interpolation only uses four of its neighboring pixels.
Avoid re-sampling if you can unless you want a pixilated look. Alternatively
you could shoot on film and have it scanned in or just make smaller prints.
If you must upscale an image then it is important to TEST what it looks like at
different dpis at the final print size.
Finally, you would also use this to res-down an image. If you're preparing a
photograph for use on the web you want to have it at 72 ppi. You would turn
on Resample Image, set the value to 72 ppi, and then set the Width and
Height to whatever you needed. Photoshop will then throw away the
unneeded pixels and create an appropriately sized file.