>I have a strange Photoshop issue. I have a file in 300dpi. When I save
>it as a gif or jpeg and then open that file, suddenly the file is in
>72dpi. How come and how to get it in 300dpi?
All GIF files are always 72 pixels per inch. (Note: Forget the misleading an
d
incorrect language scanner makers make; your images are measured in "pixels
per
inch," not "dots per inch.") The GIF standard does not permit saving a GIF
image with any other resolution.
Your JPEGs are probably 72 pixels per inch because you are using Save for We
b,
which removes resolution information.
The question is, why is it a problem? If you are saving an image for the Web
,
the resolution makes no difference and is ignored. Only the *total number of
pixels* matters. On the Web, a 320x200-pixel image at 72 pixels per inch is
identical to a 320x200-pixel image at 300 pixels per inch, which is identica
l
to a 320x200-pixel image at 6,000,000 pixels per inch.
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