

What you should NOT do, unless you only ever intend to post your photos to the web, is shoot basic and downsize in the camera. Here is a place of free photo-related utilities, some of which resize images: Others may leave ugly artifacts, strange banding, jaggedy lines, and so on. Some are sophisticated in how the remaining pixels that compose the image.

These free power toys include applications called Image Resizer and Raw Image Thumbnailer and Viewer.īe careful to evaluate the resizing tool. If you're on Microsoft XP, check out the XP Power toys at this link: If you are a mac user check out this small application. Why don't you change the in camera setting to normal and medium size? For more detail: Tuatara57macaw edited this topic ages ago. This is one of the settings that I am particularly anal about. I also ensure that the option to maintain the aspect ratio is selected. The application sets the other dimension automatically. For example, to upload to flickr, I set the longest length to 1024 pixels, which is the maximum size that I can display using my free flickr account. This will significantly reduce compression noise and garbage, and the image quality will be better.

When I resize an image, which at that point has already been converted or is ready for conversion to JPG or PNG, I set the compression option to its lowest compression (highest quality) setting.
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Which photo editing software are you using? Or should i just shoot Basic and the smallest size which D70s offer? Is there anyway that I can resize the image down to around 200-250KB and keep the image quality and size? Each picture is about 2.3MB (full size) I tried to resize it and change the resolution to 72 but the image then is too small. I shoot JPEG and the largest format and FINE image. I am trying to put some images on the website but the storage and bandwidth are limited therefore I have to watch out for the size of the image.
