| TJ Gibbs said at 8:54pm on December 30th, 2007 |
Picture sizing: 72dpi, approx. 200-350K file size, JPEG format.
72dpi is all a monitor can "see" anyway.
If someone steals your image, they can only use it for web posting. "Upsampling" for print quality from a 300K jpeg is "insane." If they are willing to go that far, then they Really want your image.lol.
[slightly off topic]
Hue/Saturation is also the "best" way to make a black&white
"copy" of your pictures. Just move the sat. slider all the way over [left]. |
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| Mike Sanders said at 1:08am on December 31st, 2007 |
Hey Everyone,
Just an FYI, the largest image that is ever shown on BG is a 600px x 600px image. If you upload anything larger than that we will scale it down. We never upscale any images or stretch them, as this would reduce the quality of the image. I would be happy to answer any other questions you might have. =) |
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| Janeice Silberman said at 6:50am on December 31st, 2007 |
Mike,
That is great to know. It is probably information that all new artists on BG would like to know. |
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| Jlbrown said at 10:30am on March 29th, 2008 |
Photoshop can make a painting looking a lot better than it really is. Be careful not to over do! |
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| Hilary Winfield said at 12:14pm on March 31st, 2008 |
I am having trouble figuring out how to use the layering tool in Photoshop. In other photo processing software, I've copied and pasted the image of a painting onto an image of a room (although it doesn't look great). In photoshop, I know that I'm supposed to do this by using layering, but that's all I know. Any suggestions? |
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