Digital Scrapbooking Techniques and TutorialsThis is a featured page

Resolution from PersnicketyPrints
One of the key factors to whether your digital picture looks good when it is printed is its resolution. Resolution simply means how many pixels, in other words how many dots, are in your digital photo. If the resolution is very high (i.e., there are many dots), the picture will look crisp and sharp. If the resolution is low, it will look jagged and rough, especially at large print sizes. All things being equal, a digital camera with more pixels will produce pictures with better resolution than a camera with less pixels. A 1 mega pixel camera means that the camera records 1 million pixels or dots per picture on its highest quality setting. Be aware that if you change your camera's settings to allow it to hold more pictures on the memory device, you may be reducing the number of pixels per picture, thereby affecting the quality when you print your photos. The better the resolution, the larger the file size generally is. Larger files can clog email boxes and take a longer time to download from a web site. As a result, many pictures you see in emails or on non photo-related web sites are often scaled down to a low resolution that is not suitable for high quality prints. If you are using our online photo ordering system, we will tell you if a picture does not meet our suggested resolution standards. When you add an image to our shopping cart, we tell you if the image is OK to print at that size or not. If the quality is going to be questionable, you can get more details about why the resolution is less than what we suggest.

Love Your Layers from Scraps of Mind

In my opinion, the absolute best feature of photo editing software like Photoshop, Photoshop Elements (PSE) and Paintshop Pro is the Layers Palette. Working with layers gives you so much flexibilty to try different elements on your layout design without accidentally ruining another area of it. So for those who are just getting used to layers in their life, here’s Ten Top Tips to help you love your layers (note: this is PSE oriented but the principles are the same for all editing software, you just need to translate the appropriate function names and locations).Read the rest of this entry

The Visual Triangle from Scraps of Mind

Three is my absolute favourite number in Scrapbooking! Most of my layouts are created using the ‘Visual Triangle’ principle. This means placing the elements in a triangle around the layout. I like to do this especially with my embellishments as it creates a virtual boundary for the eye, linking all the layout elements together.

Printing your Digital Layouts from Scraps of Mind

I don’t know about you but I’m an old fashioned girl. I like to be able to touch my scrapbook pages in printed form. Looking at them on the PC screen just doesn’t do it for me. I’m sorry, until they’re printed out they’re just not real. But I don’t want to go to the trouble and expense of taking my 12×12 inch layout files to a professional printer to get it done. I want instant gratification. However, as is the case with most of you I expect, I only have a regular A4 or Letter width printer.

Upsizing your Photos from Scraps of Mind

When I first got my digital camera I knew zippo about the importance of resolution and what the real difference between the ‘good’ quality setting and the ‘best’ quality setting was, other than that I got more photos in the camera memory if I kept it on ‘good’ rather than ‘best’. And when I uploaded the photos on the computer they were at 72dpi but they were 18″ wide. That’s way too big , I thought. So I resized them to something more sensible, BUT not understanding the mysteries of dpi, I left the resolution at 72 dpi. Then, compounding my ignorance, I saved over the top of the original file. Is this starting to sound familiar to any of you?

Rule of Thirds and Z Movement from Scraps Of Mind

Pulling together a design for a scrapbook layout can sometimes be quite challenging. Working out how to combine all the elements on your page to create the best effect doesn’t always come naturally to me and perhaps some of you struggle with it too sometimes. So I thought I’d take a moment today to return to basics and talk about a couple of key design principles in scrapbook layout design: the Rule of Thirds and ‘Z’ Movement.

Haiku Kudos from Scraps of Mind

A couple of months ago I posted an article called Haiku Heaven which discussed the haiku as a great poetry form and a really useful technique for journaling. I invited readers to add their own haikus to the comments page and got some fabulous responses. I thought maybe it was time to bring these great examples of the haiku poetry form out from behind the curtain of the Comments page and into the light of the Scraps of Mind front page. So here are these wonderful contributions; mostly from people who had never done this before.

Blending your own Backgrounds From Scraps of Mind


One of the joys of Digital Scrapbooking is the mileage you can get out of your digital scrapbook elements. Not only do you have the luxury of being able to use the same element over and over again on many different layouts, but you can also change it’s size and colour as well, to vary the look. But one of my favourite techniques is blending. By blending two or more papers together, for example, you create a completely different look that’s totally unique to you. As someone who is not a designer, I find this a huge buzz and I highly recommend it to all digital scrapbookers. And the beaut thing is…it couldn’t be easier to do. Here’s how (the instructions are for Photoshop Elements but the principles will work in any good photo editing software): Read the rest of this article.


PersnicketyPrints
PersnicketyPrints
Latest page update: made by PersnicketyPrints , Feb 22 2010, 1:22 AM EST (about this update About This Update PersnicketyPrints Edited by PersnicketyPrints


view changes

- complete history)
More Info: links to this page

Anonymous  (Get credit for your thread)


There are no threads for this page.  Be the first to start a new thread.

Related Content

  (what's this?Related ContentThanks to keyword tags, links to related pages and threads are added to the bottom of your pages. Up to 15 links are shown, determined by matching tags and by how recently the content was updated; keeping the most current at the top. Share your feedback on Wetpaint Central.)