Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Dec 31 10:42 am)
Tell your producer the only way you are going to get a poster size print of a 600x400 image is if he has access to Fairy Land and a giant bag of magical pixie dust. You'd be hard pressed to get a decent 4"x6" print out of something that small.
To do a halfway decent print, you will need at bare minimum a 100dpi image. And that would be pushing it. I rarely go below 300dpi for my prints. There isn't a program available anywhere that will let you do anything remotely close to getting a non-pixelated, decent poster print from something that small.
Message edited on: 01/16/2005 03:30
Attached Link: http://graphicssoft.about.com/od/increaseresolution/index_r.htm
Yea, there are. See the above link for a few of articles/reviews on some of them. I personally use Genuine Fractals but there are others that seem to work just as well.Donald pooh-pooh's Fairies? And he lives in Seattle? Best be careful next Halloween. I guess it would depend a lot on what sort of artistic statement you are trying to make with the poster? One sees extreme enlargements from a TV capture all the time; scan lines, noise... If that's what is in mind you should be OK with just Photoshop. Rember to use the Video>Deinterlace filter. There are programs out there (though I can't recall the company), that will combine several frames of video to get a higher resolution image. This stuff won't help you too much if your subject of interest is moving. [In very simple cases, like reading vehicle license plates, this can work with motion.] Otherwise, an overhead projector and paint brushes may be the most fun. But you should be able to enlarge the image as much as you want (in photoshop, etc.), and use this as a reference layer (in photoshop, illustrator, painter).
Attached Link: http://www.lizardtech.com/products/gf/
This is probably the best available (at a price) but even so I doubt you will have that much success with an image that is so small. They claim to be able to go up to 900% but IMO you would have to have at least a good quality image to start with.This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.
A while ago there was a thread about a pixel enhancment program, I don't remember what it was called, but it was suppose to add pixels to an existing image to make the file larger in order to print. Does anyone remember this thread, or what the software was called. I know there were some mixed reviews about this software but I have a still that was taken from a video we shot last year. The still is only 600 X 400 @ 72 dpi. but my producer wants to make a poster from it. I told him the file is not large enough to make a poster size print but he is stubbron... he wants that shot... How can I get a clear, non pixelated print from such a small file? I thought I would try the pixel software but I cannot remember what it was called.
Even if you choose not to choose, you still have made a choice