There's some good info in this thread...most of it "old hat" to Qimage users, I suspect. But it turned into something of an argument about uprezzing, interpolation, etc. I cannot believe how some photographers jump through hoops just trying to print large at the proper resolution. Just sample some of the posts in that 10-page thread and you'll see what I mean.
Hi Owen,
Got a phone call the other day asking for some help; prints not sharp and clear; on an Epson 7800; 20 x 30.
This gentleman was a long time user of Qimage.
I tried to follow as best as I could on the telephone, and it came down to something like this:
I put my images through Lightroom, and make my adjustments. Then I save my work as a TIF and when it asks what size, I select 300 ppi.
Next I want to crop my image. So Proceed to crop it as I see fit, and again save that as a Tif, again selecting 20 x 30 at 300 ppi.
My prints are not sharp even though I sharpened them in Lightroom and they looked good. What am I doing wrong?
I told him to put the original into Qimage Studio, (he was still using Studio) and me being blind to the image, I walked him through a little sharpening using USM.
Being blind to his image I could only suggest that he use a 5 radius and a 50 strength....
At this point, he told me that he used 5, 7. 75 (if I remember his sequence) on *all* his images in LR.
Some were good and some were not, but he read about it, and those were the recommended settings!! (For any image?
)
With the image in Qimage and the print size set to 30 x 20..... we had a ppi of 120. *"That's too low! They all say I need 300"*
Make the print. I'll wait!!
OMFG (No translation available) That was his comment.
The print was gorgeous (his words)
How come?
How many times did he interpolate (add fake pixels) to that image?
Qimage interpolated one time....
This was a man, a very nice man, who has called before, that was caught up in all the guru hype from others.
So when you thank Qimage for all we learned over the years, I have to put in a plug for Mike who created Qimage and who keeps teaching us the right way to work our pictures.
Fred