Hi, this is a band and I think they may possibly be using these for an album cover so possibly printing. I have never had printing issues saving this way, and photos were shot on with multiple formats but for these ones an A7. " The a7 utilizes a 24.3 megapixel full-frame, 35.8 x 23.9mm CMOS sensor"Hi, are these commercial clients or regular folks looking to make prints? Is 5858x3905 your sensor size? (excluding crop for aspect ratio)
Ok, so you are near full res for your camera. I think Google might be screwing things up or they (your clients) just don't get it. If they are using a graphic designer though, give them PSD files or TIFF. JPG throws quality away when it compresses. The files will be larger (the dimension doesn't change though) because their is no compression that is throwing information away. Friends don't let friends use JPEG.Hi, this is a band and I think they may possibly be using these for an album cover so possibly printing. I have never had printing issues saving this way, and photos were shot on with multiple formats but for these ones an A7. " The a7 utilizes a 24.3 megapixel full-frame, 35.8 x 23.9mm CMOS sensor"
For the longest time I've just exported my photos as "Full Size" whenever saving an edited photo from Lightroom.
I have sent a paying client photos of what I saved as full size export but they are asking if I have even higher resolution.
I'm not sure if they are confused b/c of the DPI information or how they're downloading off google drive or if I am saving incorrectly.
I attached a screencap of info when I click on show inspector.
View attachment 267698
This is also true, and it uses the Adobe algorithm. I get better results with RAW Therapee, but what wiltw suggests is way easier. I'd try what he suggests first and see if that can meet your needs. And yeah, always shoot RAW.You CAN tell Lightroom to export a larger pixel count than the native count of your camera, if you have shot RAW.
Your camera's 5859 horizontal pixel count would ordinarily print 19.5" long x 13" at 300 ppi.
So tell LR to Export a larger JPG file that is 39" x 26" at 300 ppi, and it will export a JPG with 11716 Hpixels x 7810 Vpixels, for example.
I did that to print a canvas 20" x 60" from my Canon S120 P&S
You CAN tell Lightroom to export a larger pixel count than the native count of your camera, if you have shot RAW.
Your camera's 5859 horizontal pixel count would ordinarily print 19.5" long x 13" at 300 ppi.
So tell LR to Export a larger JPG file that is 39" x 26" at 300 ppi, and it will export a JPG with 11716 Hpixels x 7810 Vpixels, for example.
I did that to print a canvas 20" x 60" from my Canon S120 P&S
Yes. I sent them as JPG with the idea in mind that they still have to choose their favorite picks since my intention is to go further into editing after they choose. I just wanted to know in advance before I send again.Ok, so you are near full res for your camera. I think Google might be screwing things up or they (your clients) just don't get it. If they are using a graphic designer though, give them PSD files or TIFF. JPG throws quality away when it compresses. The files will be larger (the dimension doesn't change though) because their is no compression that is throwing information away. Friends don't let friends use JPEG.
Ok cool. Your file is plenty usable at 16x20@300dpi. That's way bigger than an album cover. An old school LP is only 12x12. Unless google is messing with what you send them or they are downloading wrong somehow I can't imagine what they are expecting or why. Welcome to Photrio BTW.Yes. I sent them as JPG with the idea in mind that they still have to choose their favorite picks since my intention is to go further into editing after they choose. I just wanted to know in advance before I send again.
The Lightroom Export dialog allows you to specify the print dimensions, and the ppi density...it will export the number of pixels in order to make a print of that size and density, regardless of the pixel count of the original RAW data. For example, if you specified at time of Export that you wanted a 30" x 20" print at 400ppi, it would output a JPG with12000 x 8000 pixels.This is what the settings look like. I can choose Full Size which looks like this: View attachment 267699
or Custom: View attachment 267700 Seems like i can only adjust long side. Also when I adjusted to 300 PPI it was very pixelated so I changed it to what looked best which was 4,000? Idk I'm so confused truthfully.
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