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4.5. Find Info About Your Image

Figure 3.29. Finding Info

Finding Info

This example uses another image image from APOD [APOD06]. Much information is available directly from the Image Window; for example, the image dimensions.Use Image ? Image Properties to open the Image Properties dialog, which contains even more information.

Figure 3.30. Image Properties Dialog

Image Properties Dialog

If you are just making a square out of a rectangle, like in the Section 4.4, “Crop An Image”, it is fast and easy to find the smallest dimension. you need only to open the dialog and find the lesser length and use that as described. Since this is very little information, and definitely not enough to fill the space between the menu thumbnail and the dialog screenshot in my layout, I thought I would run through some calculator exercises that might help you to meet your image needs.

Figure 3.31. Scale Problem

Scale Problem

It is nice to have images appear on a browser window as a photo would. Photos online appear to be 4x6 inches when scaled to 288x432 pixels (72 dpi for many monitors). There is a problem, however, if you try to scale this image. The ratio of width to length of the original does not match the ratio of the photo. So, to make the scaled image the correct size some pixels must be cropped from the height. The final image will appear as a 6x4 inch photo on many monitors.

Figure 3.32. Problem Solved by Cropping

Problem Solved by Cropping

There are problems when mixing scanned photos, digital photos, and scanned negatives. Many film developing machines automatically crop portions of the image so that they will match the printing size, or a certain style. If you are preparing an image to be printed on a machine like this; or if you are planning on a gallery where the images are from different sources, some intelligent cropping to fit the best size for the medium you have chosen will be a plus. If this is confusing; please blame the photo printing industry and not GIMP.

You can change the Resolution of your image as well, using the same methods we used to Scale the image, although, in my somewhat limited use, the issue is more about how many pixels. Let's say you want to print an image at a photo lab. 300 pixels for every inch is preferred. An image that is 2241x1548 pixels will easily print as a 7 x 5 photo. 2241px/300ppi = 7.47 in. Get your calculator for the short side. 1548/300 = _.

There is another brutal fact you should come to terms with if you are new to graphics and computers. Just because it looks good on the screen doesn't mean that it will print nicely. I tried to emulate how this image would appear printed at 300dpi. Sorry. There are some options, for instance my friend printed images and then scanned them back in. Terrible business!

Figure 3.33. Actual printing result of example image

Actual printing result of example image