Software for resizing

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JimMc7

Member
Joined
May 12, 2009
Messages
731
Location
NE Oklahoma
I like Google's free Picasa software for organizing photos and Picasa has a re-sizing function, too (File, Export Picture to Folder... and select a size).
 

t001xa22

Member
Joined
Jun 17, 2011
Messages
441
Location
Arlington, TX
Smitty, I have been using "Shrink Pic" for a while now. It lays in the task bar, idle if you desire it to be. When you are ready to shrink some pics, enable it, and it will shrink pics for web use, email, etc.; it's automatic. Later, when done, you can idle it again. It has worked great for me.
 

EarlD

Member
Joined
May 5, 2011
Messages
585
Location
Albany, GA
Just to give you another choice...Google Picasa and it's free. It does a decent job of cropping, adjusting the color balance, etc. After I've cropped my photos I can then select the ones I want and click on file\Export Picture to Folder. Then I select to resize to 800 pixels and it copies the resized photos to a new folder. Then I upload these to Photo Bucket and use a direct link in forum messages to display them. The reader doesn't have to click on a thumbnail and then click to exit the thumbnail.
Hope this helps.
EarlD
 

Sylvanite

Member
Joined
Jul 18, 2006
Messages
3,113
Location
Hillsborough, North Carolina, USA.
While there are many free tools that will resize photos, I haven't found any that do as good a job as Photoshop Elements - except possibly for the Gimp. Most resampling algorithms soften an image considerably, even when shrinking a photo. Photoshop and the Giimp will allow you to choose a better algorithm, and to resharpen the pic afterwards.

Regards,
Eric
 

toolcrazy

Member
Joined
Dec 23, 2006
Messages
5,408
Location
Port Orchard, WA
While there are many free tools that will resize photos, I haven't found any that do as good a job as Photoshop Elements - except possibly for the Gimp. Most resampling algorithms soften an image considerably, even when shrinking a photo. Photoshop and the Giimp will allow you to choose a better algorithm, and to resharpen the pic afterwards.

Regards,
Eric

I agree with this. Most of the free software does shrink the photo, but does it at the expense of quality.

Photoshop and Gimp does have a steep learning curve. But are going to be better at retaining quality. If you up for purchasing a consumer version you might try Photoshop Elements or Corel's PaintShop Photo Pro (It is on sale at Corel's website for $30 bucks). Both are reasonably priced and will retain the quality of the image.
 
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