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Author Topic: Alamy question...  (Read 11843 times)

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« on: February 17, 2012, 07:27 »
0
Hi,

I just registered on Alamy.com... and my images are ''low in MB'' regarding the agency standards. from what i understand they require more MB from a image than is normal for his format and resolution.......   ....!!!

My question is:

how to up size ( in terms of Megabytes ) a 8MP image jpeg format and 5MB size to 20-24MB JPEG format???????

.....or is something that i didn't understand?


Ed

« Reply #1 on: February 17, 2012, 07:44 »
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Alamy acceptes images that are 8 megapixel.  The "megabyte" refers to an uncompressed image (TIFF file).  I submit at minimum 8.2 megapixel.

« Reply #2 on: February 17, 2012, 08:03 »
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If you open the "image size" dialogue box in photoshop and make sure you have a RGB jpg file, then the "pixel dimensions" number at the top of that box is the number that Alamy is looking for.   It's basically 3x the number of megapixels.

« Reply #3 on: February 17, 2012, 09:15 »
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What BaldricksTrousers said, but be careful that the modus is 8 bit and not 16!
They accept 6 mp and higher and upsizing not always give acceptable results.

Quote
Alamy Submission guidelines
We need:
   Images from at least a 6 megapixel DSLR or more. See here for: Recommended digital camera list
   JPEGs saved at a high quality setting (i.e. Photoshop level 10 or above).
   Alpha-numeric file names ending in .jpg.
   RGB files, not single channel greyscale or CMYK.
   Uncompressed file sizes of more than 24MB. This means you should make your JPEG file from an 8 bit TIFF file that is at least 24MB. If you have a camera that is capable of producing an uncompressed 8 bit file of over 24MB then leave it that size.

Step by step:
-open image in PS (8 or 16 bit) as .tif or .psd file
-prepare the image as you wish
-control to set back the imagemodus to 8 bit
-control image size in Image size dialogue box
-the size is found directly under Image size.(called: Pixel dimensions ....M. That ....M should be 24M or higher)
-upsize when needed (and when quality is good enough to upsize)
-save as .jpg in highest possible quality

« Reply #4 on: February 17, 2012, 09:18 »
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Alamy acceptes images that are 8 megapixel.  The "megabyte" refers to an uncompressed image (TIFF file).  I submit at minimum 8.2 megapixel.

exactly.. thats the only request.. I believe it is 8.4MP.. basically I upload and they "reject" lower sizes..

« Reply #5 on: February 17, 2012, 09:33 »
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Perhaps you are right, but I did this copy and paste from the Alamy site a few minutes ago. :-\

« Reply #6 on: February 17, 2012, 09:38 »
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Perhaps you are right, but I did this copy and paste from the Alamy site a few minutes ago. :-\

I shoot on D90, camera raw, photoshop and save JPG (12) and sRGB.. then upload to all agencies, nothing different to Alamy

« Reply #7 on: February 17, 2012, 09:57 »
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I did a quick calculation: Yes, you both are right and the info on Alamy's website is a bit confusing.
To get 24M you need at least 8,2 megapixel.
What Alamy says is that you can use a 6 mp camera and then upsize the images to 24M.
So my mistake...

« Reply #8 on: February 17, 2012, 11:32 »
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thanks for the info.... Very helpful

« Reply #9 on: February 17, 2012, 12:35 »
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They take 24MB but their preferred size is 48MB or a little more. That used to be their old minimum size (except for sports). A lot of people upsized 6MP images to 16MP in the early days so going from six to eight is not an issue for them.

wut

« Reply #10 on: February 17, 2012, 17:40 »
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They take 24MB but their preferred size is 48MB or a little more. That used to be their old minimum size (except for sports). A lot of people upsized 6MP images to 16MP in the early days so going from six to eight is not an issue for them.

Lol and I thought I was lucky thinking I sneaked 3 upsized images through :) (from 5/6---> 8.2). And I only did it because I thought they really had potential

microstockphoto.co.uk

« Reply #11 on: February 17, 2012, 17:48 »
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A lot of people upsized 6MP images to 16MP in the early days so going from six to eight is not an issue for them.

It may not be an issue, but when I tried to upsize they failed my pictures a couple of times for "softness", which makes sense.

Since I am only submitting native 8+ megapixels, I always passed quality control.
« Last Edit: February 17, 2012, 17:50 by microstockphoto.co.uk »


 

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