Quizzes & Puzzles13 mins ago
Pixillated Image
6 Answers
Hello:
I have an image that I need to use for a book cover design. However, the original designer is not available to get hold of.
I'm really considering providing the image to a brand new designer to start again but just make it less 'pixilated'.
However, I suspect there might be some software that will allow me to tweak the image without losing the quality.
Can anyone make some suggestions please?
Thanks in advance.
I have an image that I need to use for a book cover design. However, the original designer is not available to get hold of.
I'm really considering providing the image to a brand new designer to start again but just make it less 'pixilated'.
However, I suspect there might be some software that will allow me to tweak the image without losing the quality.
Can anyone make some suggestions please?
Thanks in advance.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.An image is pixelated because it doesn't have the information in any more detail. No program no matter how good can get the information that is not in the image.
Many programs will "interpolate". They insert pixels of an intermediate colour and brightness between the pixels that are there but it will not bring back the detail that was in the original scene. It doesn't really improve the resolution, just increase the pixel count.
Some might even look around the pixel and guess that a straight line approaching it should actually continue through. These can potentially help but unlikely without a lot of human intervention.
The new designer will paint over the original in higher resolution and recreate an impression of what they think should be there. It is really the only way you will get a satisfactory outcome if you need to increase the size of the image beyond what the original pixels will support.
Many programs will "interpolate". They insert pixels of an intermediate colour and brightness between the pixels that are there but it will not bring back the detail that was in the original scene. It doesn't really improve the resolution, just increase the pixel count.
Some might even look around the pixel and guess that a straight line approaching it should actually continue through. These can potentially help but unlikely without a lot of human intervention.
The new designer will paint over the original in higher resolution and recreate an impression of what they think should be there. It is really the only way you will get a satisfactory outcome if you need to increase the size of the image beyond what the original pixels will support.
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