Soocom1
Been spending a lot of time on here!
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Oh I get that part.
The DPI v Mp is based on concepts that are not necessarily erroneous but based on comparison imaging from cameras that hold the image to a certain standard and that information is pushed to the general public.
The thing to remember is that at that printed size you’re asking for, you wont be looking at the image from 10 inches away.
So the pixilation that takes place will only be seen if you are close tot he image.
You have to stand back some distance to actually see it. So thus, as long as the image produces that size, your in good shape.
The size of a 4000 x 6000 DPI image can be done in any photo editing but with some pixilation taking place.
RAW images shot and then post processed can be as large as 50+Mb in size and can hold the overall quality when post processed to that size.
This link can help:
https://www.sony.com/electronics/support/articles/00027623
And here:
How to Understand Pixels, Resolution, and Resize Your Images in Photoshop Correctly
The DPI v Mp is based on concepts that are not necessarily erroneous but based on comparison imaging from cameras that hold the image to a certain standard and that information is pushed to the general public.
The thing to remember is that at that printed size you’re asking for, you wont be looking at the image from 10 inches away.
So the pixilation that takes place will only be seen if you are close tot he image.
You have to stand back some distance to actually see it. So thus, as long as the image produces that size, your in good shape.
The size of a 4000 x 6000 DPI image can be done in any photo editing but with some pixilation taking place.
RAW images shot and then post processed can be as large as 50+Mb in size and can hold the overall quality when post processed to that size.
This link can help:
https://www.sony.com/electronics/support/articles/00027623
And here:
How to Understand Pixels, Resolution, and Resize Your Images in Photoshop Correctly