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MT37

macrumors regular
Original poster
Aug 9, 2006
142
0
Oshawa, ON, CA
I'm curious if there is a way to change the DPI on my Canon Rebel XT.

I would like to change it to 300 if possible.

Thanks.
 

Grimace

macrumors 68040
Feb 17, 2003
3,568
226
with Hamburglar.
I'm curious if there is a way to change the DPI on my Canon Rebel XT.

I would like to change it to 300 if possible.

Thanks.

DPI is for printing. You want to change the pixel count on the Rebel to the highest possible setting. Set it to L (large) or RAW. Dividing the pixel count [ex. 3600x2400] by 300dpi printing gives you the largest size you can print at that [print] resolution [12x8].
 

MT37

macrumors regular
Original poster
Aug 9, 2006
142
0
Oshawa, ON, CA
Ah, right. I always shoot Large or RAW. So I would have to change the DPI in Photoshop? I have noticed all my pictures are 72 DPI.

Sorry, I'm trying to figure it out so I can print some of my photos at 300 DPI.

Thanks again. I'm sorry if I'm being a bother.
 

-hh

macrumors 68030
Jul 17, 2001
2,550
336
NJ Highlands, Earth
To change DPI

In Photoshop CS2, with an image open:

Go to IMAGE menu

Halfway down, click on "Image Size..."

In the dialog that opens, it should be:

Pixel Dimensions:
Width (value)
Height (value)

Document Size:
Width (value)
Height (value)
Resolution (value) <--- you'll want to change this one to 300

Then three checkboxes:

[ ] Scale Sizes
[ ] Constrain Proportions
[ ] Resample Image <--- but watch out for this box. You probably don't want it checked

----



When importing in RAW, look in the bottom left: Space, Depth, Size, Resolution (value).
Change the last one from 72 to 300 and you should be set.





-hh
 

CanadaRAM

macrumors G5
To clarify:
you take pictures in pixels -- so a 3000 x 2000 file would be 6,000,000 pixels or 6 megapixels.

How large you print this is controlled by your printing software and choices.

At 72 pixels per inch resolution (conventional monitor screen resolution), it would be 41 inches by 27 inches

The same collection of 6M pixels at 300 pixels per inch resolution would be 10 inches by 6.6 inches
 
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