No, only on the quality. If you have a picture that is in low quality, perhaps because you scanned it that way, printing in high resolution won't be able to improve the image quality.
It all really depends what size of digital print you are wanting to make. The larger the print the higher the resolution needs to be so that the image is not fuzzy. I would visit www.photoshopessentials.com/essentials/image-quality/ and read the tutorial about how the resoultion of your digital images affects image quality when printing.
Image quality, also known as print resolution, is usually measured in DPI-(dots per inch)
The HP LaserJet P2015 is one of the highest quality printers on the market. It can print high resolution photos up to 1200 dpi resolution at a quick rate.
There are different resolutions recommended when you want to print pictures, depending on what camera you use. It also depends on who is printing your pictures.
Changing the image resolution will affect the file size of the image and the quality of the image. Image resolution is measure in DPI, which is Dots Per Inch, this means that if you increase the resolution then the DPI will increase and the quality of the image will get better as a result as there are more pixels that make up the image, so the image will be more distinct and sharper. When the image resolution is increased the image has more pixels, this is the exact opposite to the compression techniques, this means that the file will get a lot bigger as the number of pixels increases. Decreasing the resolution, however, will make the image quality lower but will reduce the file size.
* decrease the resolution * add more memory to printer/computer * decrease the resolution * add more memory to printer/computer
Yes it is, depend of what You want to do with image. IF You want to print then resolution is very important, if You gonna post image on web site more important are pixel dimensions because on web images will be displayed with 72 ppi regardless of original image resolution.
A JPEG image loses quality when it is opened and resaved due the compression algorithms. The more an image is opened and resaved, the more the quality can degrade. An image on a disc will not lose quality unless you resave it on a CD-RW. Opening an image to print will not affect the quality.
The larger the resolution, the larger the file size. When you compress a photo, chances are you are going to lose a lot of information from the photo that degrades picture quality.
These are "ink-jet printers" - they use tiny drops of vaporized ink to provide a high-resolution matrix of dots that can form near-photographic quality images.
yes