When I've done to make a wallie.. I want to save it to .JPEG format
with the maximum image quality but at the same time it will increase
the file size of my wallie..
what should I do to make a high quality image with a reasonable file
size?
Some times you got to just have to do a little
hard work and do a little tweaking yourself when it comes to optimizing a image.
I usually just leave it med quality setting (I may play the different settings
like blur, etc to get the file looking as good as I can with as little file size
as possible.
What you should do (if you have Photoshop, that is) is to use the Save image for Web option. This allows you to
fiddle with the quality settings while seeing its effect on both file size and
image quality. For high quality images you'll want at least 60 (Photoshop's
default for "high") although for various reasons you might have to
change this number (red compresses badly so increasing it will help image
quality; if an image is simply too large you can lower it to reduce file size.)
Make sure you set the view settings to "2-up" which will put the
original and the compressed version side by side for direct comparisons.
Hi guys.. I need your help
When I've done to make a wallie.. I want to save it to .JPEG format
with the maximum image quality but at the same time it will increase
the file size of my wallie..
what should I do to make a high quality image with a reasonable file size?
I need your advice.. thanks for your concern
i always put it on high quality so it looks good but that your choice
Some times you got to just have to do a little hard work and do a little tweaking yourself when it comes to optimizing a image. I usually just leave it med quality setting (I may play the different settings like blur, etc to get the file looking as good as I can with as little file size as possible.
What you should do (if you have Photoshop, that is) is to use the Save image for Web option. This allows you to fiddle with the quality settings while seeing its effect on both file size and image quality. For high quality images you'll want at least 60 (Photoshop's default for "high") although for various reasons you might have to change this number (red compresses badly so increasing it will help image quality; if an image is simply too large you can lower it to reduce file size.) Make sure you set the view settings to "2-up" which will put the original and the compressed version side by side for direct comparisons.