December 19th, 2009 → 1:27 pm
@ Admin
// 7 Comments
galactic129 asked:
My photos thanks to larger than their original size but dont want to see the actual pixels on photo paper however want to print few images on photo paper however want to print few images on photo paper however want to see the.
Tags: Loose Quality, Photos, Print Photo
jered
2 years ago
i dont think you can
fBass
2 years ago
you have to reproduce the image..
you would need image editing software like photoshop.. and you need trace the image..
yes, no easy way to do this
viscomunderground
2 years ago
You can’t add information that isn’t there. If you have a crappy image that is what you have. I suppose one option would be to print the image smaller at the higher dpi and then scan it in at a magnified size. But there is still a good chance it won’t look so great. Good luck!
Beaux H
2 years ago
You can’t but try this…
Enlatge the image to 7 inches as widest/tallest point… then set dpi for 600.
The software will interpolate the information and if you don’t see jagged edges after this experiment you have an enlarged image.
Beaux
photoenhance
2 years ago
I’m not exactly sure how much it costs but you should take the photo/disk to your local photo lab and ask them to turn it into a negative (I’m assuming that it’s a digital photo). Once the picture has been turned into a negative it’s much easier to get large prints without distorting the quality.
Tony
2 years ago
To make smaller photos larger without losing the quality is hard but it can be done. Both photoshop and paintshop pro have built in software that will interpolate the info and help you resize the photo to a larger size. If you are really serious about this, you want to get a program called genuine fractals which can be found here:
kfhaggerty
2 years ago
It’s a tough nut. There really is no way without some degree of degradation. The best (and hardest) way I know is to make a high quality print of the photo you want to reproduce, and re-shoot with a large format camera, with actual, high quality film. Not at all easy or cheap, but there will be the least amount of perceptible degradation after enlarging. Sorry.