Author | Thread |
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07/26/2007 05:00:16 PM · #1 |
I have a magazine that needs a copy of a logo from one of my sites. THey want it hi res. That is all the info the owner passed on from them. Hi Res is ???? What I have is the psd file still 436x 317 72 dpi. I made it for the web never thought of any other uses at the time.... Help Please
Edit to add: is it ok to ask for credit on the image under it?
Message edited by author 2007-07-26 17:03:30. |
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07/26/2007 05:03:52 PM · #2 |
"Hi-Res" depends on how big they plan to print it. If it's to be about an inch across, then you have an approximately 300 dpi file, which should be fine.
Is it black/white, grayscale, or color? |
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07/26/2007 05:10:11 PM · #3 |
Full color.... All pinks it is a "race for the cure" logo.
the logo |
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07/26/2007 05:44:54 PM · #4 |
3" 300 dpi.... I can do this in photoshop?
I tried it with the image size it ruins in.... ??????????
Message edited by author 2007-07-26 17:46:16. |
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07/26/2007 05:45:27 PM · #5 |
If they are going to print it the size it is in the center of the page, you should be OK with the number of pixels you have.
Change it to 300 dpi without resampling (you should have the same number of pixels), convert it to the CMYK color space, correct the color (if necessary/possible), and save as a TIFF file. That should work for a print magazine. |
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07/26/2007 05:46:24 PM · #6 |
Originally posted by liltritter: 3" 300 dpi.... I can do this in photoshop? |
You can -- it may or may not lose quality. Can't hurt to try if you work on a copy : )
Upsample using Bicubic Smoother if you have PS CS or later.
Message edited by author 2007-07-26 17:47:15. |
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