Tải bản đầy đủ (.pdf) (5 trang)

101 QUICK AND EASY SECRETS FOR USING YOUR DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHS- P18 docx

Bạn đang xem bản rút gọn của tài liệu. Xem và tải ngay bản đầy đủ của tài liệu tại đây (573.81 KB, 5 trang )

Outsourcing Your Printing
There are numerous options for ordering prints online. I’ve listed an assortment of services in
Table 4.1. Each service is somewhat different in what products they offer, as well as the prices
they charge for prints. In the table I’ve listed the price for 4×6 prints as well as the price for the
largest photos they make. For more about enlargements, see the next section.
TABLE 4.1 PRINTING SERVICES
Service Other Types of Partners Price for Largest Print
Products Prints 4×6 print* Size (Inches)/
Cost*
PEphoto.com Photo books, Luster, glossy, PE ROES engine, 0.06 50×165: contact
cards, calendars, metallic, downloadable company for price
canvasses, mounted, software for (matte only);
mountings, laminated upload 30×40: $29.99
and lamination for first one,
$10 for second
QOOP.com Canvas prints, Glossy, matte, Flickr 0.19 24×36: $26.99
stickers, greeting canvas prints
cards, calendars,
business cards,
products that
other site
members make
Kodakgallery.com Calendars, cards, Glossy, matte iPhoto 0.15 20×30: $18.99
frames, albums, (matte only)
photo books,
and gifts
PhotoWorks.com Photo cards, gifts Glossy, matte Webshots, 0.15 24×36: $34.95
Flickr, Picasa
Shutterfly.com Photo books, Glossy, matte, Picasa 0.15 20×30: $22.99
cards, stationary canvas (order
600 for 0.10


per print)
Snapfish.com Calendars, cards, Glossy, matte Picasa 0.09 20×30: $19.99
frames, albums,
photo books, and
gifts
*Costs don’t include shipping.
Preparing Your Photos for Use ■ 71
Many printing services require that you become a member of their site. As part of membership,
they host your photos. For more about photo hosting, see the “Storing Your Photos Online”
section in Chapter 1.
Print partners are a very important feature of ordering prints. Online print services team up
with photo hosting sites for easy access to photos. For example, you can order the photos you
have on Picasa from Snapfish.com. Picasa will forward your photos to Snapfish, Walgreens,
Shutterfly, and PhotoWorks. To do this, go to your Picasa album (or photos), select Prints >
Order Prints, go onto the next album (or photo), and repeat. When you’re finished picking
your photos to print, navigate to Print > View Prints. You’ll be taken to a new window where
you can forward the photos you’ve chosen to the print services company you want. Pretty cool.
Blowing Up Your Prints to Wall Size
If you’re just itching to have one of your
photos blown up big—really big—you
can have it done by going to the web and
ordering it (see Figure 4.7). Online digital
imaging sites have software that lets you
upload your photos to their servers so they
can access them for enlargements. They can
then enlarge and print your photo and send
it to your snail-mail address.
72 ■ Preparing Your Photos for Use
Figure 4.7 You can enlarge your photos using online
digital imaging services.

NOTE
Remember that while it’s nice to have
an enlarged photo, you have to think
about how you’re going to mount and
frame it after you get it enlarged and
printed.
In Table 4.1, you can see that PEphoto.com blows up prints to sizes up to 50×165. Another site,
EnlargePhotos.com, also offers photo enlarging and printing. Here’s the scoop on some sites:

PEphoto.com. You can even talk to these people about your project online at
www.help.pephoto.com. A 40×60 print is $79.95 on glossy or matte paper. Shipping costs
aren’t included. They can mount photos up to 30×40 inches.

EnlargePhotos.com. A 40×60 print, only available on semi-matte, will run you $108.50.
Prints on Satin Canvas are also available; the largest they print on this paper is 32×48 inches.
The largest print on photo paper is 34×51. Shipping costs aren’t included.

Epostershop.com. They can blow up your prints to custom sizes. Their recommendations
for size are based upon what the resolution of the image is and how far people are from the
image when viewing it. Blowing up an image to 36×54 costs $84.
Of course, enlarging a photo doesn’t happen with just a snap of the fingers. There are many factors
to consider about the photo before you print it. Those are described in the following sidebar.
Preparing Your Photos for Use ■ 73
BIG PHOTO MEANS BIG RESOLUTION
When you send out your photos for enlargement, it’s best not to fool with them before you
do it. If you resize or resample your photo in an image processing program (see the section
in Chapter 1 called “Resizing Your Photos for Different Uses”), it’s likely that you’ll degrade its
original quality. For example, if you increase the resolution of your photo to 300 dpi and
enlarge it to the size you want it printed, Photoshop (or another image processing program)
will rebuild the pixels. One thing is for sure, the rebuilt pixels won’t provide the nice detail you

had in the original photo. Many enlargement services use photo enlargement programs that
are much better than Photoshop, so it’s best to leave the enlargement up to them.There is a
good one—Genuine Fractals GF PrintPro—that’s fairly user-friendly if you absolutely have to
do the enlargement yourself.
The photo that you upload should be one with a high resolution. Before you decide to enlarge
a photo, look at it on your monitor at 100-percent magnification. (Type 100 into the bottom
left of the window in which your photo is displayed in an image processing program.) If it
looks soft or ragged, know that the inconsistencies will show up in the enlargement.
With today’s high-megapixel cameras, enlargement has become a lot easier. It’s not uncommon
to get a photo enlarged to 42×64 inches if it’s a decent picture taken with a dSLR camera of
8 pixels or more.
CHAPTER 5
Scrapbooking
Bug Gotcha?
S
crapbooking and photography go hand in hand. Usually a scrapbooking page is
made with a couple of photos. The photos used can be anything from a snapshot
of the family to a compelling landscape photograph. It just depends on the
photography experience of the scrapbooker. Many learn the two hobbies simultaneously.
Some get so good at both that they are making money through online platforms, giving tips
and advice about how to get better at both hobbies. A great example of this can be found
at thepioneerwoman.com. She has an incredible grip on both hobbies (not to mention
being a savvy writer)—so much so that her website gets millions of hits. In this chapter,
I’ll integrate the two hobbies so you can delve into both.

×