Megapixels Resolution in PPI
Now
a days IP Camera markets going to use 7MP, 10MP, 16MP resolution for Better background information (photo quality).
The
first things to understand is that in digital imaging, the only thing that
really counts about a file is how many pixels are in a file. Terms like
megapixels, DPI and file sizes in megabytes only confuse the issue. In the end,
all digital images are simply X pixels by Y pixels big (by Z bits of colour
data but we can ignore that for now)
Pixels
Per Inch is
the key term. It is a description of the logical number of pixels from your
original image (X pixels by Y pixels, remember) that will be used to tell the
printer to print one inch on paper. Assuming a sharp original shot with good
technique (see resolution discussion below), the higher the PPI, the better the
quality print you can achieve - this is testably true even well beyond most
claims of 360 PPI being the most you need ... 600 PPI images can easily be seen
to be much sharper again if this data is available at good quality from the
original file).
Here's
why:
1. A megapixel is 1
million pixels. It's an area measurement like square feet.
2. A typical 8 megapixel camera produces images that are 3266 x 2450* pixels.
2. A typical 8 megapixel camera produces images that are 3266 x 2450* pixels.
If you multiply 3266 by 2450, you get 8,001,700 or 8 million pixels.
3. To find the largest
photo quality image you can print, simply divide each dimension by 300:
3266 / 300 = 10.89 inches
2450 / 300 = 8.17 inches
4. If you are not publishing your images in a book or magazine, and you're just making prints for yourself or your friends, you can "cheat". Good quality inkjet printers can make a nice looking print at 250 or 200ppi. At 200ppi, the maximum print size becomes:
3266 / 300 = 10.89 inches
2450 / 300 = 8.17 inches
4. If you are not publishing your images in a book or magazine, and you're just making prints for yourself or your friends, you can "cheat". Good quality inkjet printers can make a nice looking print at 250 or 200ppi. At 200ppi, the maximum print size becomes:
3266 / 200 = 16.33 inches
2450 / 200 = 12.25 inches
2450 / 200 = 12.25 inches
Megapixels vs. Maximum Print Size Chart
Megapixels
|
Pixel Resolution*
|
Print Size @ 300ppi
|
Print size @ 200ppi
|
Print size @ 150ppi**
|
3
|
2048 x 1536
|
6.82" x 5.12"
|
10.24" x 7.68"
|
13.65" x 10.24"
|
4
|
2464 x 1632
|
8.21" x 5.44"
|
12.32" x 8.16"
|
16.42" x 10.88"
|
6
|
3008 x 2000
|
10.02" x 6.67"
|
15.04" x 10.00"
|
20.05" x 13.34"
|
8
|
3264 x 2448
|
10.88" x 8.16"
|
16.32" x 12.24"
|
21.76" x 16.32"
|
10
|
3872 x 2592
|
12.91" x 8.64"
|
19.36" x 12.96"
|
25.81" x 17.28"
|
12
|
4290 x 2800
|
14.30" x 9.34"
|
21.45" x 14.00"
|
28.60" x 18.67"
|
16
|
4920 x 3264
|
16.40" x 10.88"
|
24.60" x 16.32"
|
32.80" x 21.76"
|
36,
Nikon D800
|
7360 x 4912
|
24.53" x 16.37"
|
36.80" x 24.56"
|
49.06" x 32.74"
|
*Typical Resolution. Actual pixel dimensions vary from camera to camera.
**At 150ppi, printed images will have visible pixels and details will look "fuzzy".