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About Scott Valentine
Expertise
Most anything about digital post processing (Photoshop, etc), effects, and image restoration, some technical information about digital imaging systems, light and electron microscopy, optical physics and image analysis. I can help with shooting basics, lighting setups, and getting the most out of your digital camera. I am also an 'expert' here for Photoshop (Computers/Technology > Software > Graphics Software > Photoshop).

Experience
I've been an image analyst and advanced amateur photographer for over 6 years. I run an Adobe user group, focusing on digital media, and have lectured on digital image capture systems. Currently, I am an administrator for a rather large instructional Photoshop forum

Organizations
Adobe User Groups, National Association of Photoshop Professionals, Advanced Imaging Specialists

Education/Credentials
Bachelor of Physics, University of California, San Diego

Awards and Honors
Winner: Best in Show and several category first place awards - Imaging Professionals of the Southwest Print Competition (multiple years)

 
   

You are here:  Experts > Arts/Humanities > Visual Arts > Digital Photography > reducing image size

Topic: Digital Photography



Expert: Scott Valentine
Date: 10/8/2007
Subject: reducing image size

Question
I want to send an attachment but don't  want to send a large photo file. How do I
resize the photo  to make a small jpeg?

Answer
Thanks for your question, Walter. There are a handful of ways to get your images small enough to email. Picasa (http://picasa.google.com) is a free image browser and media management system provided by Google. It has a number of basic editing features, including cropping and resizing. It also offers some online sharing capabilities, which brings up the next point; hosting your pictures.

If you like, you can set up a free gallery at many sites, including Flickr.com and photobucket.com among others. These sites allow you to upload and organize your images, and some offer basic editing capabilities, including resizing. The advantage here is that you can simply upload your entire image (up to the allowed size by each site), then send a link via email. This reduces bandwidth, and when your visitor gets to your site, they can see all of your galleries or sets in a variety of sizes. Some even allow viewers to purchase prints.

Another option is to check your camera software to see if it has some built-in sharing capabilities. Nikon and Canon both have software that not only helps organize your photos, but it can help you with automated email functions that will resize your chosen pictures to something suitable for email.

So, here are three different ways to share your photos. Each has some advantage and disadvantage over others. I particularly like Flickr.com, though Picasa looks to have some great features and has both online and desktop functionality.

Keep in mind that you also have a handful of ways to resize - you can crop or physically cut out the areas of an image that aren't useful; you can save at a much lower resolution; you can resize the actual image (e.g., shrink it); or you can do a combination of all three. It can be a balancing act, but the simple solution is to find an image host you like and just send out links.

If you have further questions, or would like some clarification, please don't hesitate to ask!

-Scott

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