Old 04-08-2008   #1 (permalink)
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Help!

I'm designing birthday cards with photoshop cs2. I'm new to this and would like some help. My problem is that when I'm finished I save in jpeg and email it to HEB. And my results are totally different, it looks very blurry. What am I doing wrong? Please help.
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Old 04-08-2008   #2 (permalink)
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There's a good chance you are compressing the Jpeg too much in order to make it "emailable."

FYI (In case it'll help someone):
When working in photoshop, you should never save an on-going project as a Jpeg. This is because everytime you save a Jpeg you actually degrade the image quality. Without getting technical, let's just say that it is very much like making a photocopy of a photocopy over and over again. Recall those copies that have been recopied so much they're hardly readable!

So save even your on-going PS projects as a PSD. This'll be the default if you have layers in the file. When you have a "flattened" file, we should all be saving these files as a DNG or TIFF. Tiff and Jpeg are the most universal. DNG and Tiff do not compress the file at all, so there's no degridation if the image.

In photoshop there's a "Quality" slider that appears when you are saving a Jpeg. You should save your Jpeg at no lower than a "level 10." This will reduce your file size quite a lot from a "size 12" -which is the maximum, least compressed jpeg in photoshop. The differences between a "10 and 12" of the same Jpeg are too small to see.

** Note: Merely Cutting or Copying and Saving or making a CD (or emailing etc.) a Jpeg is not the same as opening the jpeg in PS or other image editing software and saving as a Jpeg again. With the former you are duplicating the data in the file, with the latter, you are re-compressing the data that was already compressed. -The copy of a copy of a copy scenario.

When sending a job to a printer:
In Photoshop, make sure you either use a resolution of 240-300ppi and your image size is equal to the final printed size. Beyond this, we should always contact the printer and ask them what parameters they'd prefer. This includes file format.

In my opinion and experience, if I were working on something to be off-set printed and I was working in photoshop, I'd save the file as a .PDF with the highest quality .PDF settings I could command. -Be mindful that making a .PDF gives us the opportunity to reduce file size for emailing. -But this is meant for viewing on screen -NOT printing.

I hope I helped : )
-E!
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Old 04-08-2008   #3 (permalink)
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when I must save as a JPG, I always make sure that I am zoomed way in on my work. That way when i use the preview checkbox next to the quality slider, I can see when my image may be getting too compressed for my personal liking.
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Old 04-13-2008   #4 (permalink)
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I always work with 300 DPI. Once I have finished whatever I happen to be working on at the time I save both PSD and JPEG versions of my art. (And as a png when applicable) I have printed of countless copies of my art with no problem whatsoever. If you are emailing a "rough" copy use the "save for web" option. Otherwise save it as the full sized jpeg/tiff file and upload to somewhere like 4 shared and send the link in an email so the recipient can DL the larger file themselves.

As long as your original was created at around 300 dpi and you save at the highest quality you can you should not have a problem.... other than file size that is lol
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