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#16 |
Gimongous Member
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Sacramento, California - Vieques Island, Puerto Rico
Device: kindle
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the information regarding the kindle display comes directly from the amazon DTP website and kindle forum administrators.
in my experience, having a computer/device resize an image to fit the viewing area results in reduced image quality, additional processing time and larger than necessary file sizes. (see any large image resized in any IE browser window) if you are going to take the time to size your images, why not size them correctly in the first place instead of forcing them to fit? it is true that kindle resizes to a certain aspect ratio so using larger graphics will work if image quality is less of a priority than getting the book "published". not every resized image will look bad, but why chance it? (my opinion) the 520x620 dimensions mentioned above have about the same aspect ratio of the DTP posted limitations of 450x550. the slight delay that the users notice may be the kindle resizing the image to 450x550. i have no first-hand experience with using larger than 64kb images as grayscale images are very small to begin with and there's no reason to include extra color data that will be lost and muddied by the reader device, i think. in any case, that is the official guideline posted by amazon. |
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#17 |
reader
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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I agree, but the right size is 520x640 not 450x550. If you look at my screenshots from the Kindle, all the larger images have been resized (by the Kindle) to be 640 pixels high so 550 pixels high definitely isn't the maximum allowed.
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#18 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6
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Quote:
For example, for my own main MobiPocket device - the CyBook Gen3 - images with heights of around 760 pixels are "optimal". |
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#19 |
Holy S**T!!!
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: San Diego, California!!
Device: Kindle and iPad
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All of this is very interesting. I would have thought an 800 x600 screen would mean 800 x 600 images.
So, if I'm thinking bookplates for the Kindle, then they should properly be 550 x 450?? As for creating 4 shade gray scale images, I've done it with PS, but my favorite tool is really an old version (8.1) of Paint Shop Pro. You can save various four color palattes and load them sequentially to see which one is best for your particular image. Last edited by RickyMaveety; 06-07-2008 at 12:34 PM. Reason: because I can't freaking type |
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#20 |
Holy S**T!!!
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: San Diego, California!!
Device: Kindle and iPad
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![]() This is a comparison of an image I drew for a book that I've been working on (forever ... really ... forever). The four shade grayscale was created in PSP using their "X colors" command after first putting the image in grayscale. I tend to leave anything with that small of a palette in gif format. I'm not certain that having it be a jpg (which is more lossy) adds much to the equasion, but I could certainly look into that. |
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#21 | |
reader
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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#22 |
Holy S**T!!!
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: San Diego, California!!
Device: Kindle and iPad
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Got it .... so when I'm creating bookplate screensavers for the Kindle, those can be 600 x 800, but I should make the images in the book, the smaller size (depending on what size would be the best for the various types of e books.
Not that my book is going to hit the market anytime real soon. It's taking me ever so long to draw each image, and even longer to get the inspiration for each one. |
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#23 |
Gimongous Member
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Sacramento, California - Vieques Island, Puerto Rico
Device: kindle
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Hey Ricky-
As you can see from these posts, nearly every digital reader device has different settings for the images they can display. As I work with my artists and they begin to get mired in the tech of the end product, I always remind them to create their art at the size and in the medium they are most comfortable with. We can "fix it in post" as it were for almost anything. Don't get discouraged by all this tech talk when your work is hard enough just coming up with the ideas and putting your craft together! When all of the words and images/paintings/photos are together then decide on the platform(s) you will publish on and size/resize from there. By the time you finish one project many technologies will have changed and most of these posts will be moot anyway. |
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#24 |
Junior Member
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Device: Kindle
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Empirical evidence and testing
I ran an experiment to get to the bottom of all this. I'm doing thesis research on type design for e-paper, so actual dimensions and pixel sizes are important to me. You can read about my results here. Looks to me like 520 by 640 is the "native" reslution, and anything else gets resized.
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#25 | |
reader
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Mississippi, USA
Device: Kindle 3, Kobo Glo HD
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#26 | |
Junior Member
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Device: Kindle
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#27 | |
Karmaniac
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Location: Miami FL
Device: PRS-505, Jetbook, + Mini, +Color, Astak Ez Reader Pro, PPW1, Aura H2O
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Quote:
The color image has nice dirthering! |
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#28 |
Publishers are evil!
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Rhode Island
Device: Various Kindles
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I found a trick that might help others in creating a grayscale image in photoshop. In the tab that shows all of your layers click the tab next to it labeled Channels. Now you can click each Channel (Red, Green, and Blue) to see which one has the best contrast. Normally, I copy the image in the channel that looks best and then create a new image (this way I don't muck with my color image).
Alternatively, if you want even more control, you can select Layer/Adjustments/Channel Mixer and then check the monochrome button. Now you can play with the sliders to see which one(s) gives you the best contrast. I've also found Layer/Adjustments/Posterize helpful as well (with a setting of 16). ONLY after using one of these techniques do I try adjusting contrast/brightness. Then click Save for the Web and ALWAYS save it as a GIF file. Set your colors to 4 colors, No Transparency, and play with Adaptive/Perceptual/etc, and Pattern/Noise/etc. One thing I haven't figured out yet is what the values of the four colors should be set to. It just occured to me that I should do a Alt-Shift-D to save a screen image then edit that with photoshop to see what values the Kindle is using, but I haven't done that yet. |
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#29 |
Publishers are evil!
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Rhode Island
Device: Various Kindles
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This is the first time I've tried entering a picture on the forum, so hopefully this won't look like crap. If it does then you can look at a color image of one of my covers here
http://s415.photobucket.com/albums/p...MidSummer1.jpg and a 4 color B&W here http://s415.photobucket.com/albums/p...dSummer1-1.gif Note: They definately look better at 100%. Color JPG ![]() 4 color B&W GIF version ![]() |
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#30 |
Publishers are evil!
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Karma: 36205264
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Rhode Island
Device: Various Kindles
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Oh well, I tried. You'll have to click the links to see the images.
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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