Great links. Thanks Sam! Jens Bladt mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt
-----Oprindelig meddelelse----- Fra: Sam Jost [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sendt: 13. november 2004 15:11 Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Emne: Re: Reducing File Size with Photoshop You will see differences if you know what to look for. And someone who knows what the differences look like won't be able to ignore them :) Have a look at this, for example: http://www.photo.net/learn/jpeg/48X32X2_Jpeg_PS.jpg from http://www.photo.net/learn/jpeg/ there are more samples and a lot of explanation about this stuff. Sam ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jens Bladt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Saturday, November 13, 2004 2:51 PM Subject: RE: Reducing File Size with Photoshop > I) just did some screen tests compressing jpeg's (from tiff). Until I > compress to more than 6 (12 is min compression, 0 is max, I can't really > se > any difference on the computer screen! Prints may be different, though. > > Jens Bladt > mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt > > > -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- > Fra: Sam Jost [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sendt: 13. november 2004 14:03 > Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Emne: Re: Reducing File Size with Photoshop > > > Yep, 3 for three bytes of color data for each pixel. I usually caculate in > bytes, not bits. :) > > In the ancient times before jpeg every image was uncompressed and huge. In > these ancient times hard discs had been much smaller and storage was > expensive, so a bunch of smart people sat together and invented a storage > format for images to get them a lot smaller without loosing too much image > details -> jpeg > For more information I'd suggest a look at theyr homepage > http://www.jpeg.org/jpeg/index.html > > Sam > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jens Bladt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Saturday, November 13, 2004 12:52 PM > Subject: RE: Reducing File Size with Photoshop > > >> Noooo... >> It's 6 040 064 pixel * 24 (colour depth - in bits per pixel) = 144 961 >> 536 >> bits = 144 961 536/8 = 18 120 192 bytes = >> 18.12 MB. >> >> I you meant 24 bits/8bits pr byte = 3 (explaining the "3" in your math) - >> it's fine. >> >> I guess I don't understand what a jpeg compression really does! >> But you are right - I saved a jpeg file as a tif and then it kept the >> 18MB >> size, showing this in the Path Finder. >> Jens Bladt >> >> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> http://hjem.get2net.dk/bladt >> >> >> -----Oprindelig meddelelse----- >> Fra: Sam Jost [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >> Sendt: 13. november 2004 12:10 >> Til: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >> Emne: Re: Reducing File Size with Photoshop >> >> >>> Can anyone explain: >>> Why is the file size of an *ist D image say 3.936 MB in the Path Finder, >>> and >>> 17,3 MB when opened in PS? >> >> I'd guess 3.936MB is the file size, probably jpeg (compressed) >> And 17.3 MB is the uncompressed image data for the image (3008x2008x3) >> >> Sam >> >> > >

