How can I retain sharpness while enlarging a graphic?

OL
Posted By
O_Lisa
Mar 12, 2008
Views
472
Replies
12
Status
Closed
I am no expert at Photoshop. I greatly appreciate your help. I apologize if this has been addressed somewhere before, but I am having trouble locating anything helpful.

Can you please tell me how I can retain sharpness while enlarging a graphic. I’m doubling the size of a graphic and it’s getting really fuzzy. I tried the sharpen filters, but they just make it more boxy. Please tell me there’s another way.

Thanks again for your help!

How to Improve Photoshop Performance

Learn how to optimize Photoshop for maximum speed, troubleshoot common issues, and keep your projects organized so that you can work faster than ever before!

BL
Bob Levine
Mar 12, 2008
Increasing size decreases quality. There’s just so many pixels to go around and you can’t simply create more.

Bob
P
Phosphor
Mar 12, 2008
Can you tell us a bit more? What’s the graphic for? What resolution? What are the pixel dimensions?
I
ID._Awe
Mar 12, 2008
Lisa: You can decrease the softness by stepping, instead of enlarging it once, enlarge it slightly several times. There was an action for this.
JJ
John_Joslin
Mar 12, 2008
I haven’t got evidence but it has been stated that the latest Bicubic Smoother resizing algorithm in CS3 does a better job than stepping.
P
Phosphor
Mar 12, 2008
Or…

It may be that you don’t need to resample at all, depending on what it is you are doing.
OL
O_Lisa
Mar 13, 2008
The graphic is for a flyer. It is currently at 200 pixel res and 3.935" x 2.785" or 787 x 557 pixels. I am enlarging it to 6.25" x 4.5". It’s a single color graphic.

I tried stepping the enlargement and using the bicubic smoother while doing that. It still came out very fuzzy.

Any other suggestions?

I understand that it may not be possible, but I’m just trying not to give up yet.
P
Phosphor
Mar 13, 2008
Just not enough pixels there.

Is it a simple enough graphic that it could be vectorized? <http://vectormagic.com/>

EDIT: Oh crap! They’re charging for it now! Oh well…
I
ID._Awe
Mar 13, 2008
using bicubic smoother would make it ‘fuzzy’ because it would soften the pixels.
BO
Burton_Ogden
Mar 13, 2008
O Lisa,

One solution would be Genuine Fractals 5
<http://www.ononesoftware.com/detail.php?prodLine_id=2>

Another solution would be PhotoZoom Pro 2
< http://www.benvista.com/main/content/content.php?page=ourpro ducts&section=photozoompro_1>

I use both Genuine Fractals and PhotoZoom Pro because each has its strong points. You might want to experiment with their demos to see which you like better.

— Burton —
OL
O_Lisa
Mar 14, 2008
Thank you all. I’m going to try what you’ve suggested and I’ll let you know the outcome.
OL
O_Lisa
Mar 21, 2008
Thanks Burton!
I was able to use the PhotoZoom. It worked perfectly.
I appreciate everyone’s help!

How to Master Sharpening in Photoshop

Give your photos a professional finish with sharpening in Photoshop. Learn to enhance details, create contrast, and prepare your images for print, web, and social media.

Related Discussion Topics

Nice and short text about related topics in discussion sections