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Print module Help with output for print urgently needed

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Mike Taylor

Mike Taylor
Premium Classic Member
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Apr 14, 2019
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80
Location
Deal, Kent, UK
Lightroom Experience
Intermediate
Lightroom Version
Classic
Lightroom Version Number
13.2
Operating System
  1. macOS 14 Sonoma
Hi team
I know NOTHING about printing and never print my own work.
But I have a client who has asked for an image to be printed LARGE - like 2m across.
I gave him a 300dpi TIFF file but he's now come back and suggested i resize it "for the best quality"
The image is from my Q2 and it's 8368x5584 pixels.
I output it full size and didn't limit the dimensions.
I've also offered him an DNG.
Is there something obvious I've missed here or is he talking out of his hat?
As I said, I know nothing about printing so I',m at a loss about how to proceed.
Anything anyone can suggest would be more than welcome.
Best,
Mike
 

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At 300 dpi, your image is at an ideal size of 0.7mX0.5m. I have printed with a 110 dpi size and have had an acceptable print. So without resizing, that would be 2m x ~1.3 m at 110dpi.

Resizing certainly won't hurt. However in Lightroom you will need to go back to the original RAW file to enhance to 2X with SuperSize. I would take the finished TIFF file to Photoshop or Topaz Gigapixel AI to resize. to 23622px X 15763 px
 
At 300 dpi, your image is at an ideal size of 0.7mX0.5m. I have printed with a 110 dpi size and have had an acceptable print. So without resizing, that would be 2m x ~1.3 m at 110dpi.

Resizing certainly won't hurt. However in Lightroom you will need to go back to the original RAW file to enhance to 2X with SuperSize. I would take the finished TIFF file to Photoshop or Topaz Gigapixel AI to resize. to 23622px X 15763 px
Hi
Many thanks for this.
I've finally got to the actual printer and he thinks the file I supplied (100+mb 300dpi TIFF at 8368x5584 px) will be ample to do a print 2m wide.
He thought our mutual client was fussing about nothing.
But it's at least got me thinking - and made me realise why I want nothing to do with printing.
Leave it to the experts...
Best
Mike
 
Your client has a strong belief that upscaling is going to deliver magic results with a 2m print, which may or may not be true. I am glad that you reached out to your printer, as their opinion is the one that counts with respect to printing the image. And as Cletus alluded to, the PPI may be less than the ideal 300 since a print this large is not going to generally be viewed at close distances.

Good luck,

--Ken
 
One note that hasn't been mentioned - if you're shipping it off for someone else to print, I would do yourself a favour and make it a colour space of sRGB for lowest-common-denominator printing. I've had clients come back to me complaining about prints they made on their own from the master final JPEGs I delivered which look fine on their screens but Print Lab X didn't do a good job in creating prints.
 
One note that hasn't been mentioned - if you're shipping it off for someone else to print, I would do yourself a favour and make it a colour space of sRGB for lowest-common-denominator printing. I've had clients come back to me complaining about prints they made on their own from the master final JPEGs I delivered which look fine on their screens but Print Lab X didn't do a good job in creating prints.
Perhaps it is more important to use the color profile recommended by the print lab. sRGB is the worst gamut to print from. AdobeRGB would be better and a color profile specific to the printer and paper would be best. If you send an image saved with a color profile different from the one the print lab uses, thay ofter will automatically convert it to a color profile specific to the printer and paper being used.
 
Gotta laugh at the dimensional mishmash we have in printing. In these few posts we have metres, pixels count, dots per inch, pixels per inch and even mega bytes. We could have confused thing further by trying to match sensor aspect ratios with photographic paper sizes with commercial picture framing sizes. But I digress. Sorry! I just find it comical.
 
Gotta laugh at the dimensional mishmash we have in printing. In these few posts we have metres, pixels count, dots per inch, pixels per inch and even mega bytes. We could have confused thing further by trying to match sensor aspect ratios with photographic paper sizes with commercial picture framing sizes. But I digress. Sorry! I just find it comical.
Unfortunately, it is a bit of a mish mash at times. But surprisingly, we often seem to keep the conversation moving forward. And at least we do not have to deal with sensor size equivalency discussions that plague so many photo forums.

--Ken
 
Mishmash. Exactly why I don't print my work for me or for clients. It's a dark art to me, so I leave it to people who I trust know what they're doing. Difficult when you're dealing with a client's chosen designer/printer.
 
Difficult when you're dealing with a client's chosen designer/printer.
Generally better working with directly with the printer than working through the client, as evidenced by your follow-up post above. At least they understand the mish mash and know what they need. Hope all turns out well.

--Ken
 
Generally better working with directly with the printer than working through the client, as evidenced by your follow-up post above. At least they understand the mish mash and know what they need. Hope all turns out well.

--Ken
I use a 3rd party print lab that ideally can accept 16 bit TIFFs, Specifies a color profile other than sRGB. and can supply their icc profiled used for Soft Proofing. WHCC is my preferred online print lab https://www.whcc.com/help
 
I use a 3rd party print lab that ideally can accept 16 bit TIFFs, Specifies a color profile other than sRGB. and can supply their icc profiled used for Soft Proofing. WHCC is my preferred online print lab https://www.whcc.com/help
I use WHCC as well, but sometimes clients want what they want. Thankfully for the OP, the printer knew how to handle what the client thought they know how to handle. It helps to be fluent in mish mash.

--Ken
 
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