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Photography Q&A
Picture size and zoom quality
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<blockquote data-quote="J-see" data-source="post: 420444" data-attributes="member: 31330"><p>What you should not forget is that whatever the JPEG size you use, you always shoot with the same resolution sensor. For mine the large format is 6K*4k and the smallest 3K*2K and while that might seem a huge difference, it really isn't. It's just a 50% smaller shot but it's still a very large file when it comes to images. It's probably larger than what your monitor can display.</p><p></p><p>The images you see here are 50% of that smallest format and then another 50% of that. It doesn't make them look pixelated does it?</p><p></p><p>And with the software capabilities of these days to blow up images, we won't see many differences for the formats we use. If you print, it's another matter.</p><p></p><p>The fine option and such is only about compression.</p><p></p><p>Resolution makes more difference when its the sensor itself.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J-see, post: 420444, member: 31330"] What you should not forget is that whatever the JPEG size you use, you always shoot with the same resolution sensor. For mine the large format is 6K*4k and the smallest 3K*2K and while that might seem a huge difference, it really isn't. It's just a 50% smaller shot but it's still a very large file when it comes to images. It's probably larger than what your monitor can display. The images you see here are 50% of that smallest format and then another 50% of that. It doesn't make them look pixelated does it? And with the software capabilities of these days to blow up images, we won't see many differences for the formats we use. If you print, it's another matter. The fine option and such is only about compression. Resolution makes more difference when its the sensor itself. [/QUOTE]
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