: How can I increase my jpg from 72 dpi to 150 dpi and not have the printable size shrink? I have to print some banners that will be 2'x3'. They will have different company logos on them
I have to print some banners that will be 2'x3'. They will have different company logos on them sized as large as I can to fit on the banner, with 3 lines of text below.
The problem is many of my sponsors do not have high resolution logos, they are asking me to use web images or scan in a business card or letterhead.
How can I resize a jpg larger without losing quality?
I need them to be at least 150dpi, but then be able to size them large enough for the banners.
I have Fireworks, and all the programs in Adobe Design Suite C5 - there has got to be a way :(
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There's no way to truly increase the resolution of a picture/logo if it's not originally there. If you do, all the software will be doing is actually "invent" new pixels and ultimately, you'll end up with a blurry image anyway.
In most case, you can increase the resolution about 20% more on the original file before you start seeing some visible degradation on your image.
That might not help you much since you're working on a very big size layout.
Since you have a specific need and already mentioned how you plan to use these logos, there's some ways to go around that low quality logo issue:
Sometimes, simply showing a sample/proof of the logo at the real banner size can be convincing enough to make the sponsors work a
bit harder to provide you better logo than web logos. That's usually the first step you should try. Lot of time, clients have bigger logos, they just don't know that web logos are simply not suitable for printed projects. They're usually horrified to see their blurry pixel-like logo and paid a good amount of money for sponsoring... they'll help you get a better quality logo quickly after seeing the low quality logo in context!
If you can't reach them, there's some tricks you can use to transform
quickly a logo. For example, with logos that are "real logos" and
don't have a lot of special effects such as gradients and drop
shadows, you can always try to trace that logo in Illustrator at
72ppi and recolor it (the bigger the image is, the more details you'll get). You'll end up with a vector that isn't perfect
but still better than a web jpg at low resolution.
For the logos you can scan, you can't get miracles from very small
scans but scanning at very high resolution and "cleaning up" the logo
can help a bit. Sometimes, all you need to do is re-trace it in Photoshop to sharpen the edges and re-do stuff like shadows or gradients. It's not a bad idea in some case to scan in "lineart" (true black and white) and manually add back the colors in the logo using Photoshop. Or you can always trace that lineart in Illustrator (as mentioned above) and colorize the logo there. It's even better and probably easier too.
If that client has an online presence, you can also try to find PDF online and extract these logos from it. It's worth searching for this.
Sometimes you can be lucky and the logo will be in vector in that
PDF! If you find a PDF with one of the logo, you can try opening it in Illustrator to get a vector file or you can extract the logo directly from software such as Adobe Acrobat Pro.
If you can, you can also try to ask for an invoice in a Word file format or that
kind of thing. Sometimes these files can be exported as PDF and you
can get a better quality output than using a logo from the web. And
sometimes they have a high resolution logo in these files too.
If you're lucky, the sponsor may have a "media" section on their
website and you can get better logos there. It's also worth looking
for press releases, annual reports and such; You could find a file that has a vector or high resolution logo in it. Look on the small footer links of their websites, most of the time these sections are not in the main navigation menu.
If you are close to a local printer, you can always ask them for
logos. They often have a bank of logos of pretty much all the local businesses
dealing with them and do a lot of sponsor projects themselves. If you
print that banner locally, you can ask that printer if he has better
logo files.
How can I resize a jpg larger without losing quality
For the most part, you simply can't. There are some tools that supposedly can make an upscaled image look better than if you were just using the defaults in Photoshop by using fractal scaling and the like, but there just isn't a magic trick for this.
If the logos are big enough and not overly complex, you might get away with auto-tracing them in a vector illustration tool. That might give you a be of leeway in upscaling (since vectors can be scaled without a loss in detail). The catch is that there just may not be enough detail to begin with.
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