Pic Re-sizing?

tNs

super human
Joined
May 4, 2006
Posts
18,046
Hey guys & girls, I need some help with pic resizing so I can post a few in the am-pic section. My file/pics are too large and won't upload.


Please help!


:confused:
 
Another tip is to reduce your DPI to 72. Most monitors won't see much of a difference between 72 DPI and 300 DPI. A slight one maybe, but nothing that warrants the difference in file size.
 
thickNshaved said:
Hey guys & girls, I need some help with pic resizing so I can post a few in the am-pic section. My file/pics are too large and won't upload.


Please help!


:confused:

https://forum.literotica.com/showthread.php?t=319201

There are two reasons for a picture being rejecte as "too large" -- pixel dimensions and file size.

To solve the pixel dimension problem, change the "units" setting in whatever image editing program you choose to use to "pixels" from Inches, Centimeters, or DPI. Then set the larger dimension to "600" Make sure the "constrain proportion" or "preserve aspect ratio" option is turned on so that both dimensions are changed proportionlly.

(the limits are actualy 800 pixels wide or 600 pixels tall, but setting the larger dimension to 600 will make your pictures fit the dimension limits without a lot of computation.)

The file size problem canusually be eliminated by just converting the images to JPeG format, but most image editors have a "JPeG Quality" setting somewhere that can adjust the compression factor to reduce the filesize without reducing the image size.

IrfanView, the program recommended in the link above, is free, easy to learn, and can resize all of your pictures in one operation, using batch mode. It does however, require a PC; It isn't available for MAC users.
 
pic resizing

hi,

I use ACDSEE software program. Not only it helps resize but maintains the quality of the pic also, that you don´t see a diff. Also, it will help you create galleries

hope it helps.
miss delight
 
Weird Harold said:
https://forum.literotica.com/showthread.php?t=319201

There are two reasons for a picture being rejecte as "too large" -- pixel dimensions and file size.

To solve the pixel dimension problem, change the "units" setting in whatever image editing program you choose to use to "pixels" from Inches, Centimeters, or DPI. Then set the larger dimension to "600" Make sure the "constrain proportion" or "preserve aspect ratio" option is turned on so that both dimensions are changed proportionlly.

(the limits are actualy 800 pixels wide or 600 pixels tall, but setting the larger dimension to 600 will make your pictures fit the dimension limits without a lot of computation.)

The file size problem canusually be eliminated by just converting the images to JPeG format, but most image editors have a "JPeG Quality" setting somewhere that can adjust the compression factor to reduce the filesize without reducing the image size.

IrfanView, the program recommended in the link above, is free, easy to learn, and can resize all of your pictures in one operation, using batch mode. It does however, require a PC; It isn't available for MAC users.

OK Harold, could you come and re-do mine? I will try and print this out and give it a try. :rose:
 
Succulent-one said:
OK Harold, could you come and re-do mine

I may be in the pacific northwest in late August, but I think you'll probably have figured it out for yourself by then. :p

There are several good programs that make resizing a matter of just typing in the change to the larger dimension and hitting enter. Irfanview is one that costs only the time to download it, plus it one of the easiest to learn how to use.

The one thing that confused the issue with many image editing programs is that they're aimed at printing images instead of posting them. That means they show image size in inches or centimters and control the displayed size with a DPI (Dots Per Inch) setting. When posting or e-mailing images, the only things that matter are pixels and bytes -- pixels determine the resolution/display size and bytes determine the file size.

Whatever program you use, think in terms of the image size in Pixels and save the image in JPeG format to manage the file-size.
 
Back
Top