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Thread: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?

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  1. #1
    Senior Member Mark Elberson's Avatar
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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    Zenfolio is partnered with several print shops. Which one(s) did you decide to use for your fulfillment? If you chose MPIX I'd go to the MPIX site and see what their recommended settings are. Again, like John said, many printers ignore the DPI in the file and set it according to their standards. 300 DPI is somewhat of a standard so I'd feel pretty good about choosing that. I would simply upload the full resolution files so that they will achieve the highest quality once they have been up-rezed for poster size prints. I do however think it's a good idea to offer a low-rez file for smart phone, email, social networking, etc. I think Zenfolio will do the heavy lifting for you though. I don't think it's necessary to upload the same file twice in different resolutions. I "believe" that Zenfolio will down-rez your file for digital downloads.

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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    Thanks Mark, your input is greatly appreciated, as is everyones!


    I chose MPIX, so that

  3. #3
    Super Moderator Kayaker72's Avatar
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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    Hi Rich,


    In the past I

  4. #4
    Senior Member bob williams's Avatar
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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    Rich, I have been using Zenfolio for about 18 months now----You definately want want to upload your shots in the highest res available. Zenfolio and Mpix will do the work after that. When you are logged on to your site and choose to share one of your photos, zenfolio will offer you several size options, so no need to down size of have smaller copies. Also, if you want to order a print, but the print doesn
    Bob

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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    @Brant, Thanks for the link!


    I guess you could say the website is under construction. I'm in the process of uploading images, adjusting the appearance and setting prices..., things like that. When I'm a little further along I'll post the link and I would love to get everyones feedback.


    @Bob, Thank you very much, I appreciate it!





    @Rick, I found out that Zenfolio downsizes their viewing images to 1550 x 960 as the max, you could even downsize this quality further. They claim that is done to protect the photographers images, and load the images faster, but now I'll have to explain to people that the images will look better when downloaded or printed. I'm not sure if that feature could be turned off.
    <div></div>
    <div></div>
    <div>Does anyone know if dpi (dots per inch) is the same as ppi (pixels per inch)?</div>
    <div></div>
    <div>I'm uploading the images as JPEG original size, quality 12, and dpi=300, which comes out to approx. 10MB per image. The original RAW files are approx. 20MB, however since JPEG images are compressed and lossy, I assume that the 10MB is the highest quality for JPEGs from a 16MP Camera. If I'm making some incorrect assumptions, then hopefully someone will let me know.</div>





    I'm putting a watermark on the uploaded images. For now, I'm just using the Zenfolio default setting "PROOF" Does anyone think that this is a bad idea, as it does block the image slightly, however the watermark is transparent and I lightened it up as well? Eventually I might upload my own watermark.


    Also, does anyone know what a good "low-res size" for phones or social networking sites, the choices are 1MB, 3MB or I could set a custom Pixel x Pixel dimension, but I'm not sure which dimensions would work the best?


    Do you guys and gals think I should charge a lower price for these low-res images, or just throw it in for free when they buy the high resolution image. In reality it takes the same amount of work to create the final image whether it's high-res or low-res.


    I'm also working on some packages, apparently this website is very customizable.


    If anyone else is interested, there is a setting in Zenfolio that gives the photographer final approval before purchase, so that you could re-upload a higher quality TIFF file prior to MPIX printing it. This is nice, because I've been editing these Surfing photos for the past 3 days and they're still not dialed in perfectly in my opinion, because I just had too many to edit (approx. 1500). However, if someone buys an image, then I will have an opportunity to just re-edit those images more meticulously.





    Thanks,


    Rich

  6. #6
    Super Moderator Kayaker72's Avatar
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    Re: JPEG Vs. TIFF Quality for Zenfolio?



    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Lane
    <div>Does anyone know if dpi (dots per inch) is the same as ppi (pixels per inch)?</div>

    Hi Rich, I haven't dealt with this in years,so here is a link to wikipedia on the subject (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dots_per_inch). My understanding is that the terms are often swapped erroneously. DPIshould be yourprint resolution or output and ppi is your image resolution or input (when printing).So, if yourDPI matches your PPI you are printing one dot for every pixel in your image file, this would be equivalent to a "100%" image on a monitor. If you can print at 600 DPI, and your ratio of DPI to PPI is 1:1 then you also have 600 pixels represented per inch of your print (100%), or a lot of real detail in your printed image. When you print at ratios of DPI to PPI other than 1:1 you are either causing several pixels to be represented by a single dot, thus losing data, or having multiple dots representing a single pixel, essentially creating "fake" data in your image.


    I hope that helps,


    Brant

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