I think it would depend on three things. 1.) Subject matter, a very detailed photo will loose a lot upresed that much, while a less detailed shot might be fine. 2,) Viewing distance. If viewed from a reasonable distance it will look fine. Close up flaws will be very apparent. 3.) The method used to upres the shot. Genuine Fractals is supposed to work miracles, stepwise bicubic interpolation is supposed to work almost as well, (and is available to anyone willing to make a Photoshop action). You could try resizing using the second method to get a reasonable pixel density for your purposes then crop out a sample size and print it to see if it would work.
David J Brooks wrote: > I can't seem to fiqure out the math on this and don't want to quess, > but can anyone tell me what size i need to uprez a 2000 x 1300 file to > print 16x20. > > If a 2.74 D1H file can be resized that big. > > A client wants this size for her company wall. > > Dave > > -- All dogs have four legs; my cat has four legs. Therefore, my cat is a dog. -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

