I want to calculate as how many pixels is needed to draw that image. Thanks in advance. Then you can convert Inches to Centimeters to match your requirements. In Monitor specifications, they have not mentioned its DPI. Hi, I am sorry for confusing you. First i need to know what is the dpi of my monitor.
Then after knowing it i want to know how many pixels are used to draw an image say 9 x 7 cm. If i know what is dpi, then it ll be easy to caluculate number pixels for my respective images To know DPI, one method was to use that RED BAR in this website and another was by using expression.
I want to know which is right. Yes sir. I am using measuring tape tailor 60 inches in length , to measure red bar. I am getting 3. Hi, I went through that link and found my monitor resolution is x Thanks a ton sir. No problem. Also, you should calculate based on the output device DPI in this case, the printer.
Hi Coleen, According to Inches to Pixels converter , your image should have px on the longest side. According to your dimensions it will be ok for 75 dpi.
Actually is more than kb. Suggest me. If the application know to resize the signature it should be ok. You can check our Aspect Ratio calculator to make sure it has the same aspect ratio when you scale down you signature photo. Hi, Your website is really helpfull. But please can you please tell me the formula of how you calculate dpi. Hi Fahim, glad you enjoy it. This is an extraordinarily helpful and educational website for novices like me.
Can you please tell me what my DPI is? It must be more than I am trying to measure a paved shoulder of a highway. Is there away to determine how many feet? I got 2. Could you calculate my DPI as well? I got 2 inches exactly for my measurement of the area. Any help would be appreciated! Thank you for this converter. As a matter of fact, programmers on my website told me Google only recommends pixels for one side of the photo, the other side can be smaller.
And just how should we deal with the enormous space in storage that is required to store the humongous photos Etsy wants us to use? Complete mess. Or, does Etsy mean that after we have manually enlarged all 10 pictures it allows to be used to we then have to manually and individually go back to decrease the size, after we listed here the item?
Not going to happen. Complete waste of time and storage space! My photos are or on one side, and still buyers can see just fine, all my listings. Zoom out a bit, control - minus until you can see it all on the screen. It won't show that big when you upload it to Etsy. It will look normal. OMG you guys I'm just sitting here chuckling. Computers are EASY, they said!! And they are, unless they aren't! Good grief. This allows shoppers use the Zoom button to see the larger image.
Ahh, okay I didn't see that one. I can't remember which article I was reading but all it said was pixels. I put up some new listings yesterday. Your original work can be resampled for an appropriate size web image. If you know the pixel width and height of an image, this section will calculate the physical size in inches of the image when it is printed or displayed on various devices. To use the calculator, enter the width and height, then select the output resolution which will be used.
To check your own monitor, use the chart below. This may impact the relation between input and output resolution. Generally, DPI is adequate for photo-like prints. If the catalog will be printed on a DPI printer, the item should be scanned with a resolution of DPI, and care should be taken not to re-size or resample the intermediate image file before printing.
When the output destination is a computer screen, as in the case of auction photos, the scanned image may require further reduction using an image editor before the image is physically small enough to fit on the viewer's screen.
Example: a book cover measuring 8 in. What Photoshop is really telling us is the width and height of our image in pixels. In other words, how many pixels are in our image from left to right, and how many pixels are in our image from top to bottom. It's also telling us one other important piece of information which is the file size of our image.
The dimensions and file size shown here are of the full size version of the photo above the insect on the flower before I resized it to something more suitable for a web page. So here, Photoshop is telling me that my photo has a width of pixels and a height of pixels. In other words, it contains pixels from left to right, and pixels from top to bottom.
To find out exactly how many pixels I have in my photo then, I can simply multiply the width times the height, which in this case is x , which gives me a grand total of 7,, pixels. That's a whole lot of pixels. Remember earlier when I mentioned that the camera I used to take this photo was an 8MP camera? Well, the "MP" stands for "mega pixel", and "mega" means "million", so "8MP" means 8 million pixels.
This means that when I take a photo with my digital camera, the photo will be made up of 8 million pixels approximately, anyway. If you have a 5MP camera, your photos will be made up of 5 million pixels. So if we take a look again at what the Pixel Dimensions section of the Image Size dialog box is telling us about my photo above, it's saying that my photo has dimensions of pixels wide by pixels high, for a total of 7,, pixels, which is pretty darn close to 8 million, and that's why my camera can be sold as an 8MP camera.
So that's what the first part of the Image Size dialog box is telling us - the width and height of our image in pixels. So far so good. Let's take a look now at the second part of the dialog box, Document Size, which is where we really start to make sense of image resolution. So far in our look at image resolution, we examined the first section of the Image Size dialog box in Photoshop, "Pixel Dimensions", which, as a quick recap, tells us the width and height of our image in pixels, and tells us the file size, which is usually in MB megabytes, or "millions of bytes".
Nothing terribly confusing here. The second section of the Image Size dialog box is "Document Size", which can be a bit more confusing but really isn't much more complicated than the Pixel Dimensions section. In fact, the two of them go hand in hand. Let's take a look at the Document Size section, and by the time we're done, you should have a pretty good grasp on the difference between the two and on image resolution itself.
Document Size goes hand in hand with Pixel Dimensions, yet is also completely separate from it. I know it sounds confusing, but bare with me for a moment. Notice at the bottom of the Document Size section, it says "Resolution", and in the Resolution box, it says "72". What this is telling us is that when we go to print the photo, 72 pixels out of our pixels from left to right in our photo the width , and 72 pixels out of our pixels from top to bottom in our photo the height , will be printed for every one inch of paper.
That's what "image resolution" means - how many of your image's pixels left to right and how many of the pixels top to bottom will print in every inch of paper.
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