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Image Formats?
Tramatize
post Jan 11 2008, 04:16 PM
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Whats the best format to save pictures under?
I used to use GIF. because it usually looks great, but i just saved one and the "drop shadow" looked like crap.
So whats the best format to save under?
Thanks!

[sorry if this post already exists]
 
Simba
post Jan 11 2008, 04:43 PM
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.jpg usually works just fine.

.png is one of the top quality formats, but those files usually take a lot longer to load.

I'm all good using .jpg.
 
Tramatize
post Jan 11 2008, 04:49 PM
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QUOTE(ArjunaCapulong @ Jan 11 2008, 01:43 PM) *
.jpg usually works just fine.

.png is one of the top quality formats, but those files usually take a lot longer to load.

I'm all good using .jpg.


.jpg did the same as .gif for me, but the .png worked great, it took long to load, but not too long, Thanks!
 
karmakiller
post Jan 11 2008, 08:53 PM
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There's a ton of formats. I'd deffinately say .jpg (it's pretty common, too). .PNG's save well, but sometimes they do take longer to load... esspecially on dialup. If you have anything with transparency, though, use .gif, otherwise it won't show up transparent.
 
Simba
post Jan 11 2008, 08:55 PM
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.gif I believe usually loads the fastest out of those three formats. It has a smaller color pallete though, so the quality is lower too.


If you're talkin' small images though, .png should be fine.
 
Gigi
post Jan 15 2008, 12:55 AM
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It really depends on the type of job you're looking to complete.

.JPG - Good for web, since the file size is relatively small (it's optimized for photographs). Has smallest file size, comparatively. Is okay for photographs, but really quite horrible for line art or graphic work (unless saved as 600-1000 DPI, quality saved at 12 in Photoshop, but still not the best).

.GIF - You should only use this if your image has less that 256 colours, otherwise you'll lose quality. That's why your drop shadow looked horrible (I'm assuming it was a soft drop-shadow). This means it's probably not a great idea to use this for photographs, but should be alright for line or vector art. Transparency supported.

.PNG retains great quality (it is lossless), therefore, the file size is large. However, it looks for patterns in the picture to compress, meaning that it may be smaller than a .tif file. Probably not necessary for web.

.TIF - Mostly used if you want your image to be lossless (max. image quality), so .tif files are quite large. Used more for print-work. This file supports transparency, so use this if you have an image with transparency with more that 256 colours (just remember to check that option off when saving in Photoshop).
 

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