Proportion questions (4/3 or 3/2)


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thumeau

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Dec 15, 2003
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Hi there,
As I'm planning to print some pictures for framing and for archiving into A4 folders, I realize I may have a proportion problem...

My digital pictures are from a Nikon D70 DSLR (res. 3008x2000) which is about a 3/2 proportion.
Then, the frames I bought are 12x16 which is a 4/3 format.
Then, A4 (21x29,7) is just in between.

I would like some advise on how to resolve this issue.
Do you recommend to crop, or change the ratio by distortion or a bit of both?

Also, I would like to know what are the usual printing proportions (for 4R, 10R...)

Thank you,
Thomas.
 

thumeau said:
Hi there,
As I'm planning to print some pictures for framing and for archiving into A4 folders, I realize I may have a proportion problem...

My digital pictures are from a Nikon D70 DSLR (res. 3008x2000) which is about a 3/2 proportion.
Then, the frames I bought are 12x16 which is a 4/3 format.
Then, A4 (21x29,7) is just in between.

I would like some advise on how to resolve this issue.
Do you recommend to crop, or change the ratio by distortion or a bit of both?

Also, I would like to know what are the usual printing proportions (for 4R, 10R...)

Thank you,
Thomas.

In PS, use fix aspect ratio of 4:3 to crop. :nono: never use distortion as it will degrade the quality of the image.
 

jimtong said:
In PS, use fix aspect ratio of 4:3 to crop. :nono: never use distortion as it will degrade the quality of the image.

Once you have your crop a little distortion, using Transform>Scale can fine-tweak your sizes whilst maintaining the Crop you wish without losing "Composition" and as such is a useful resizing tool, if used in moderation: i.e.10% is about the max you can go before images begin to start to look unnatural. In my opinion this is not a degredation of the quality of the image. :)
 

when you print or photoshop, always fix your aspect ratio to that of your camera, unless you plan to crop your pic into a perfect square... For D70, its definitely 3:2 ratio so keep it at that in your editing program... for A4 its 1:sqrt2 so if you print a 3:2 picture it will be either too big or too small to fit on teh page...

Hope this helps...
 

Hi,
Thanks to your information, I'm trying to compile an Excel table for a guide of resizing/cropping before printing... The table is not complete so feel free to complete it.
Also, as you can see, it doesn't show well here because of the text format... I don't know how to make it look good... If you have any idea of how to display a nice table here...

If you want the excel file. Just send me you email by PM, I will send it.
Thanks,
Thomas.




Format Height Width Ratio H(150dpi) W(150dpi) H(300dpi) W(300dpi)

3R 3" 5" 3:5 450 600 900 1200
4R 4" 6" 2:3 600 900 1200 1800
5R 5" 7" 5:7 750 1050 1500 2100
6R 6" 8" 3:4 900 1200 1800 2400
8R 8" 10" 4:5 1200 1500 2400 3000
S8R 8" 12" 2:3 1200 1800 2400 3600
10R 10" 12" 5:6 1500 1800 3000 3600
S10R 10" 15" 2:3 1500 2250 3000 4500

A5 14,8cm 21cm sqroot(2)
A4 21cm 29,7cm sqroot(2)
A3 29,7cm 42cm sqroot(2)
 

ermm...is that why Olympus cae out with the 4/3 format so that less post-processing will be needed? or there's anoither meaning to their 4/3?
 

Zod & Thumeau, please note that 3R size is 3.5" x 5". That's 1050 x 1500 pixels.
;)

The 4:3 aspect ratio has been around for digicams since a long long time ago... I remember those old (1996 izzit???) Sony Mavicas were 640x480, later 1024x768 and so on.... they are all 4:3 ratio. Nothing to do with the Olympus 4/3 system.
 

Azure said:
Zod & Thumeau, please note that 3R size is 3.5" x 5". That's 1050 x 1500 pixels.
;)


hmm, i din know 3r is tt size
:think:

thx thx! :blah:
 

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