Understanding image dimensions is essential for resizing photos correctly. This guide explains pixels, resolution, DPI, and aspect ratios in simple terms.
Understanding Pixels and Resolution
Pixels are the building blocks of digital images. Resolution refers to how many pixels an image contains.
- <strong>Pixel</strong>: Smallest unit of a digital image
- <strong>Resolution</strong>: Width x Height in pixels (e.g., 1920x1080)
- <strong>Megapixels</strong>: Total pixels divided by 1 million
- <strong>Higher resolution</strong>: More detail, larger file size
DPI vs PPI
DPI (dots per inch) and PPI (pixels per inch) relate to print and screen display:
- <strong>72 PPI</strong>: Standard for web/screen display
- <strong>150 DPI</strong>: Minimum for decent print quality
- <strong>300 DPI</strong>: Standard for high-quality printing
- <strong>For web only</strong>: DPI doesn't matter, only pixel dimensions
Common Aspect Ratios
| Ratio | Use Case | Example Size |
|---|---|---|
| 1:1 | Square, profile photos | 1080x1080px |
| 4:3 | Standard photos, tablets | 1600x1200px |
| 16:9 | Widescreen, video, YouTube | 1920x1080px |
| 4:5 | Instagram portrait | 1080x1350px |
| 9:16 | Stories, reels, TikTok | 1080x1920px |
| 3:2 | DSLR photos | 1800x1200px |
How to Resize Correctly
- Determine your target use (web, print, social).:
- Choose the appropriate dimensions for that use.:
- Maintain aspect ratio to avoid distortion.:
- Use our tool to resize without quality loss.:
- Save in the appropriate format (JPG for photos, PNG for graphics).:
Resizing Tips
- <strong>Scale down, not up</strong>: Enlarging causes quality loss
- <strong>Maintain ratio</strong>: Lock aspect ratio to prevent distortion
- <strong>Start with originals</strong>: Always resize from the highest quality source
- <strong>Batch resize</strong>: Process multiple images at once for efficiency
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