Thursday, December 4, 2008

To wrap or not to wrap ?

With box canvas prints the default option that many people want to achieve is to have a wrapped edge. Here the image continues around the side of the canvas and makes use of the 3d element of canvas prints that cannot be achieved with any other way of presenting and displaying pictures. This works well with pictures where the centre of interest is towards the middle of the picture and where there is plenty of image on the edges that can be used to form the border. However, up to a third of a picture may be used to create this effect and this can create unwanted effects. Wrapping a landscape with a narrow sky can result in most of the sky disappearing over the top of the canvas. Where important details lie towards the edge on the left or right they can end up sitting on the edge or partially disappearing around the side. If this is a problem there is an approach that preserves the wrapped effect but allows you to keep the entire image on the front surface this is often called a mirrored effect. Here elements near the edge of the canvas print are duplicated and used to create the edge of the canvas. These strips around the canvas are then reversed to create the mirror image of the picture on the edge of the box canvas

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Picture formats for canvas prints

To create a really good canvas print from your photographs you first need to think about the type of image you are going to use and what type of shape canvas you are going to produce. Landscape or portrait formats are usually the format digital pictures are produced in so pictures can readily be produced as canvas prints in this format. Little editing is usually needed to prepare a print for printing. Many subjects work well in this style, from landscapes to family groups or intimate portraits, However, often by cropping the image to focus on the key elements and remove unnecessary or distracting elements you can create a more powerful image. This can mean you create a square picture rather than an oblong one. Square formats work particularly well if you have a set of related images to print. Long thin panorama prints work well for cityscapes and landscapes and can be great for more abstract ideas. Another approach is to take a single image and split it into a set of smaller canvases that together make up one complete image. This works well for natural forms and some landscape or sunset shots can look stunning in this format.

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Monday, December 1, 2008

What can be done to enlarge a small picture with few pixels?

There are some ways around this problem. In the first place there are software programmes that can enlarge pictures and add in more pixels. These usually rely on fractal based programmes that interpret surrounding pixels and create similar ones that will increase the picture size without losing to much detail. This can be effective for crisp sharp images which have plenty of detail in them to start with Another approach is to create a vector based image from your photograph since vector based images are said to be resolution independent and thus capable of being enlarged further. This can be particularly effective with images that are being stylised to simulate real media or a particular graphic style. .Ask your digital printer to help you get the most out of your photo and if they know what they are doing they should be able to help.

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What size canvas print can I expect from my picture

What size print can I expect?
Mobile phone cameras, especially earlier ones produce quite small pictures with less than 500 pixels in width and can usually only be blown up to around 16cm by 12. They are designed to produce good snapshots and were not meant to be create much larger prints. Three or four mega pixel cameras produce file sizes that allow prints up to approximately 24 inches and to produce much larger prints requires larger files still requires a photo with thousands of pixels. To produce a large canvas print 90 cms wide requires at least 3600 pixels which an 8 to 10 mega pixel camera can provide. However the mobile phone camera image size continues to increase and more recent phone have up to 8 mega pixel cameras in them which can produce large canvas prints.

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Why image size is important

Why is this important
If you go too large with a small photograph the resulting canvas print can be pixelated or blurred and produce a poor print. To avoid this before considering a photo for a canvas print you ideally need to find out how large it is. By how large we mean how many pixels it contains. Once you know how many pixels, which are usually recorded as xxx wide by xxx high you can work out how big a print you can get. Most image editing software contains the information you need. As a rough guide find out the number of pixels and divide by 100 this will tell you roughly how big you can print in inches (a picture 1000 by 1000 pixel can be printed 10 inches by 10 inches). To find this out depends on the image editing software you use. In Adobe Photoshop you go to the menu for image and click on the image size tab from the drop down list. Here you will find the following, the width and height of the picture file in pixels, the overall size in megabytes of the picture file, the resolution of the picture file and the current dimensions of the print it would produce. Quite simply the more pixels the better.

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Three of a Kind gallery added

Three of a Kind

When you have a long thin space a set of three images often works well rather than one large picture. At scarlet-ibis-art.co.uk we have developed many designs that work well in this format. So in response to requests from customers we have added a Our Three of a Kind gallery to our website. Abstract designs including Earth Symphony
As a set of three is very popular. Often more geometic designs work well in this format and Geometic Set and Swirls are examples that can be found in the gallery. All these designs are available in three size ranging from 30 to 60 cms to enable you to match the designs to the available space. At present these are only available as stretched canvas prints. Further designs will be added as our collection expands and develops.

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