![]() ![]() But I’m assuming that these are details that won’t be seen from the typical viewing distance and aren’t critical elements for the poster to contain. I don’t know what you have in mind, and I don’t know what your illustration will look like. What I meant is that if your original illustration is considerably smaller than your printed poster, the small flaws, inconsistencies, brush strokes, pencil marks, paper textures, etc., that aren’t noticeable on the original will be blown up to noticeable size on the finished piece if scanned at an ultra-high resolution and enlarged. Thank you in advance!Īnd what do you mean by “it will be a bit blurry anyway?” Isn’t a high-res image supposed to be crystal clear? It’s basically 40+ times larger than the originally image! I am already doubting it when it says 1500 dpi… So my question is: Is 12800 dpi, or 2400, or 1500 a real thing? Do you images really enlarge 5 times with the 1500 dpi option and still looks sharp? And how about when it’s printed? Can anyone advise me the minimum size my work should be in order to get a high-res enough digital image for printing 6 ft by 6 ft? And I don’t want to make it a vector. I checked my scanner and it allowed me to scan an image at 12800 dpi. I usually work on small-size paper like letter/A4/A3, or 18x24 inches at most. I know the image need to be in 300 dpi but 6 ft x 6 ft is too much for me to do, and scan. I am an illustrator/ artist working in traditional medium and I want to do a drawing for the poster. Recently I am working on a poster design job and the final print is going to be 1.78 x 1.78 meter, which is about 6 ft x 6 ft. Hi everyone, I am new here and this is my first post.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |