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If you were going to scan
a photograph to print on a 600 dots per inch (dpi) printer, at what resolution
should you scan the image for the best output?
I’ll give you the answer in a moment but first — some basics of scanning.
The first several times I scanned a photo, the resulting file size was
frighteningly bloated. When I brought the scanned image into Photoshop
and clicked on image size, I discovered my photo was 26 inches wide. Whoa!
Whatsup? I think the only scanning options I knew to select were choosing
between B&W, grayscale and color for the image to be scanned. There
were some other options but I had absolutely no idea of what they were
or how they worked. I did have the option of scanning from 50 dpi all the
way up to 4500 dpi. The default was set at 600 dpi and I think I left it
there for about six months before figuring out that I had better change
it to a lower dpi selection. Based upon questions that occasionally arise
from our reader audience, I’m not the only neophyte scanning enthusiast
in town.
The most commonly used device to acquire line art or photos into a computer
is a scanner. A scanner is a device that captures an image and converts
it into a digital pixel map for computer processing. The most common and
versatile scanner is a flat bed scanner whereupon you place a the object
to be scanned on a flat glass sheet, close the lid and initiate the scanning
process (either a button on the scanner itself or via the scanning software.
Three dimension objects can be scanned with a flat bed scanner but the
quality of the scanned results will vary. Some multipurpose printers
also have the ability to scan pages and send or receive faxes but are limited
to scanning flat sheets only since the sheet travels through the scanner.
Some digital cameras allow images to be transferred directly into your
PC but the most common technique remains scanning.
Most scanners provide a TWAIN interface that allows photo enhancement
programs such as MGI PhotoSuite, Adobe Photoshop or Corel Photo-Paint to
interface directly with the scanner. What does TWAIN stand for? No
one seem to know — but TWAIN is a specification agreed to by scanner manufacturers
to eliminate the necessity of using a separate scanning software program
to acquire the image before bringing it into your favorite photo enhancement
software program. In other words, TWAIN allows your photo enhancement software
to talk to the scanner directly through a common interface.
Back to the question posed above: at what resolution should you scan
an image if you want to later print it at 600 dpi? If you answered
scan at 600 dpi, not only are you wrong, Jocko, you are going to have a
image bigger than a house. Why? Keep reading.
It seem s logical that the resolution of a scan should be the same,
or nearly the same, as that of a printer. The problem is scanning resolution
is different that than of a printer. Printers print dots (which are round)
and are measured as dots per square inch (dpi). Each dot made by a 600-dpi
printer is 1/600 of an inch in diameter. To produce the 256 shades of gray
that exist between black and white on a printer, these tiny dots are grouped
together to form halftone cells, and put enough of these halftone cells
will eventually form a halftone image.
Scanners scan pixels (which are square). Even though the resolution of a scanner is measured in dpi, this is misleading because the scanner resolution is more accurately described in samples per inch. Each sample represents a pixel. Each sample of a scan at 600 dpi is 1/600 of an inch square. In other words, a scanned pixel is much more like a printer halftone cell than the original printer dot. So how do you determine dots per square inch to scan? Any resolution
from 100-150 dpi would be a correct scan, giving you an image size
that you can manage without having to bring it into a photo enhancement
program and reduce the image size.
Not all images are created equal
Text and line drawings are truly black and white images. Adobe refers
to them as bitmap images. With these type images, either a white dot or
a black dot is scanned and then printed. Unlike continuous-tone images
— like photographs — which have smooth transitions, changes in line art
are abrupt, producing sharp edges. It is because of these sharp edges
you should use the following rule:
| Scan line art and text with a resolution equal
to the maximum resolution (in dpi) of the final output device (printer),
up to but not more than the scanner’s maximum optical resolution, and apply
sharpening with the scanner (if possible). |
Color text and drawings present a problem for scanning because they
require high-resolution scanning with the addition of the overhead associated
with color. In these cases, file sizes become as large as your house in
a big hurry. Here is a work-around: If your scanner supports it, scan the
image at 256 colors. If your scanner can only do 24-bit color, scan the
image and bring the scanned image into a photo enhancement program and
convert it to 256 colors. Converting the file to 256 colors reduces its
file size by 66 percent.
Photographs or continuous tone images can be color or black and white.
This type of images is less detailed and requires lower resolution than
line art. The rule for this is simple: Scan photographs at 100-200
dpi. Some variations to this rule: For 300-dpi laser printers,
scanning at 100 dpi is sufficient. For 600-dpi laser printers, scan at
150 dpi.
Some believe that scanning at a higher than necessary resolution somehow
gives their image extra detail, making it look sharper. In fact, doing
this rarely improves image quality and produces very large file sizes.
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| Remember that each time scanning resolution is
doubled, the file size quadruples |
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