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Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 5:08 am
by charlyg
I use Photshop Elements and the save for web usually works, if not, I just lower the qulaty from med to low and that usually does it.
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 5:09 am
by sloop_john_b
I too use Photoshop's "Save For Web" feature.
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 5:11 am
by heinpete
Double post!
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 5:53 am
by jingle_jangle
New cameras...I've been hankering after one of these for studio work...now that I'm setting up my studio and they've come down in price to be affordable, I picked a mint one up on the bay for way under $500.00:
It's a Sony DSC-F828. Terrific camera and a good companion to my next-one-down, a DSC-F717. I'm working on getting through the 117-page owner's manual this year.
Bought my wife the Sony equivalent of that Canon (10MB point and shoot) and it's terrific for her people/places pics.
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 12:50 pm
by leftybass
Paul, is that around a 9 megapixel Sony?? That looks like the camera David has....I'm thinking at full blast it captures at a 22MB file size for each pic...
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 12:54 pm
by cheyenne
Photoshop "Save for Web" is the way to go all right.
Posted: Thu Mar 15, 2007 1:15 pm
by alanz
Save at 72 dpi and then size to 500 x 500 and then jpeg compress to 35K and you get nice sized pictures without macro blocking. Anything over 72 dpi is extra resolution you don't need for display on computer screens.
What would be even better would be an IMG forum code tag that supported photo host site-hosted JPEG display directly (which would mean no file size restriction).