The sensor in our DSLRs have a ratio of 2:3

Hi-res means the image can be printed at 300dpi. Size the images to 2400x3600 and they 
can print any size up to 8"x12".

Lo-res images are displayed on a computer screen at 72dpi. I'd go 800x1200 just 
to make the math simple.



On 12/13/2017 18:01, Eric Weir wrote:
On Dec 13, 2017, at 1:07 PM, Paul Stenquist <pnstenqu...@mac.com> wrote:

Ken got it right. High quality hi-res jpegs are fine for making prints. Both 
low-res and hi-res should be in SRGB color space. Don’t release RAW files, even 
if someone requests them. The RAWs are your negatives, and public images should 
reflect your rendering.

I appreciate all the responses—Mark, Ken’s, and Paul’s suggestions of providing 
only low-res and hi-res JPEs and Godfrey’s admonition about offering my 
renderings. A little fuzzy about how low- and high-res get specified, but have 
put that question to Mark in my response to him.

Sincerely,



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Religion - Answers we must never question.

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