Kind of a Noobish Question
Dionysus
Registered Users Posts: 226 Major grins
but is there any way to know when you crop a picture in pp if its going to fit into the traditional print sizes, without much cropping needed by the buyer?
Ive had some instances where customers BARELY were able to crop without touching the main subject. I crop things for effect and balance, but if the customers have to crop even more at purchase, it kind of kills some pictures.
Ive had some instances where customers BARELY were able to crop without touching the main subject. I crop things for effect and balance, but if the customers have to crop even more at purchase, it kind of kills some pictures.
-=Ren B.=-
Gear: Canon EOS 50D, 28-135mm f/3.5-5.6, 55-250mm f/4-5.6, 50mm f/1.8, Canon 430EX-II Flash
Galleries: Smugmug Flickr DeviantART
Gear: Canon EOS 50D, 28-135mm f/3.5-5.6, 55-250mm f/4-5.6, 50mm f/1.8, Canon 430EX-II Flash
Galleries: Smugmug Flickr DeviantART
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Comments
Really depends on what you consider traditional.
If you want the 4x5, 8x10, 16x20 sequence use 3552x2832 pixels. No cropping.
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Just make sure the dimensions of your crop have the same ratio as the intended print size and you'll be fine.
Then when you resize it will give you a box you can drag around till it looks ok to you.
If you don't know what size they are going to order...typically on most websites they give the customer a preview option so they can see at the size they order what the crop will look like.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/21695902@N06/
http://500px.com/Shockey
alloutdoor.smugmug.com
http://aoboudoirboise.smugmug.com/
Brand, there are a couple that I know off the top of my head that shoot 4:3, not including video cameras. Since you added the smiley, my guess would be a Hasselblad...
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You give me too much credit.
No, I shoot the brand that literally puts "Four Thirds" in the title of everything.. Olympus.