Anorakus
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- 836
- Edit My Images
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I've decided to get some of my best pics framed and mounted to decorate the house, so I sent in some Jpegs to Boots to get 9"x6" prints made up.
Having never used a digital print service, I wasn't sure what to expect...
Just got the prints back this morning. Unfortunately they're excessively dark and contrasty. I've mounted them for the meantime, but I'm sure that I can get better results.
I had tweaked the shots in Photoshop CS3 - a couple of them I converted to Duotone and another I put through a bleach bypass simulation filter - but the results looked fine on screen. The prints by comparison have lost loads of shadow detail. I would have scanned them in and uploaded them, but you could get the same effect by turning the brightness down
Are there any obvious pitfalls I should be aware of when using Photoshop to create Jpegs from RAW files for getting made into prints? My pics looked fine on my laptop (no it isn't calibrated!) I've kept all settings at the default - and I realise that there are loads of variables that could affect the final result.
I'm wondering if I'd get better results from a pro service. Having said that, I've seen prints from Boots that were taken on basic point'n'shoot digital compacts, and they look fine.
Thanks for any tips
A.
Having never used a digital print service, I wasn't sure what to expect...
Just got the prints back this morning. Unfortunately they're excessively dark and contrasty. I've mounted them for the meantime, but I'm sure that I can get better results.
I had tweaked the shots in Photoshop CS3 - a couple of them I converted to Duotone and another I put through a bleach bypass simulation filter - but the results looked fine on screen. The prints by comparison have lost loads of shadow detail. I would have scanned them in and uploaded them, but you could get the same effect by turning the brightness down
Are there any obvious pitfalls I should be aware of when using Photoshop to create Jpegs from RAW files for getting made into prints? My pics looked fine on my laptop (no it isn't calibrated!) I've kept all settings at the default - and I realise that there are loads of variables that could affect the final result.
I'm wondering if I'd get better results from a pro service. Having said that, I've seen prints from Boots that were taken on basic point'n'shoot digital compacts, and they look fine.
Thanks for any tips
A.