Smug Mug Account
pizellie
Registered Users Posts: 100 Big grins
I am considering opening up a Smug Mug account and would like to ask a number of questions about requirements on my end, such as file size, resolution, etc.
Is this a place where I can ask Smug Mug questions?
Is this a place where I can ask Smug Mug questions?
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I take pictures with a Canon 5D2 and want to show my photo's on a Smug Mug Pro Account. Realize that the OOC file size is quite large for this 21mg camera.
I have trouble grasping the concept of file size, resizing, resolution, upload and download speeds.
If I want the best quality photo on my web page, what would be the recommended resolution, file size, etc.
I realize that these parameters play heavily into what size photo people would want to purchase, but I need a better understanding of these terms and what parameters to make them "before" I start uploading pictures.
Dan
The file resolution is the dimension of the image in pixels. A 5d mrkII file is 3744 × 5616 at full resolution. The file size is usually around 25MB for a RAW file at this resolution. When you save a file at quality 10 in PS or 90 in LR you're creating a jpg that is around 4-5MB in size. Even though the filesize has been greatly reduced the file is still high quality. You just don't want to save as a jpg, edit it, save, edit, save, edit, save. Each time you edit the jpg and then save it, edit it again and re-save it it is applying more compression and you are losing quality. You want to upload a first generation jpg. That means a jpg that is edited and saved directly from the original file.
There's more info on on File prep here: http://wiki.smugmug.net/display/SmugMug/File+Preparation. Take a look and if you have any other questions please let us know.
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nickwphoto
I use Canon Digital Professional Raw Converter; Lightroom 3 (which I just purchased); Photoshop CS5. I usually set my quality setting at 12 in Photoshop. So I should lower the quality to 8 or 10 - right?
Again ... you really helped and got me comfortable that I am not far off getting started.
Dan
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I know all the powers here say 8-10 is fine and nothing is needed above that, but I looked at it this way.......I use SM to Archive my Jpg files and if something really terrible happens and all I have are the files stored on SM and they are all 8-10 in quality, I no longer have the best possible files to work with.
This is how my PRO lab explained it to me over 5yrs ago........all you do by using a quality of 8-10 is save a bit of space on the Harddrive (or servers in the case of Smugmug).....I also did a test of 2 prints one at 8 and one at 12...at 8x10 there was no difference......at 30x40 there was a huge difference.......
Personally...if I take the time to shoot in raw and process the images to their best, then I am not going to cut the quality by 10-20% to store for future use.