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Photography Q&A
Post Processing -- Crop Size?
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<blockquote data-quote="cwgrizz" data-source="post: 364500" data-attributes="member: 27017"><p>Thanks for your responses. Well you have all stated what I really knew as the obvious. Ha! Capture NX-D allows for crop of various ratios including free cropping and it can be moved around (I assume similar to Photoshop). Portrait shots and similar will almost always be suitable for common ratio cropping. Landscapes can sometimes be the problem children for me. They are the types of shots that I tend to want to "Free Crop", but then printing is the fly in the ointment. Printing on larger paper is the logical solution leaving white borders----then framing using mats trying to get a symmetrically pleasing display, I guess. Ha! </p><p></p><p>Will Photo Labs print with the white borders equally (top and bottom, left and right) or do they tend to want to print crowding left-top sides? I sure this is also another obvious question, but inquiring minds want to know. Ha!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cwgrizz, post: 364500, member: 27017"] Thanks for your responses. Well you have all stated what I really knew as the obvious. Ha! Capture NX-D allows for crop of various ratios including free cropping and it can be moved around (I assume similar to Photoshop). Portrait shots and similar will almost always be suitable for common ratio cropping. Landscapes can sometimes be the problem children for me. They are the types of shots that I tend to want to "Free Crop", but then printing is the fly in the ointment. Printing on larger paper is the logical solution leaving white borders----then framing using mats trying to get a symmetrically pleasing display, I guess. Ha! Will Photo Labs print with the white borders equally (top and bottom, left and right) or do they tend to want to print crowding left-top sides? I sure this is also another obvious question, but inquiring minds want to know. Ha! [/QUOTE]
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Post Processing -- Crop Size?
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