This is very informative and obviously took a few minutes to put together, but there is unfortunately a major error at the start: if you change an image's resolution to a greater dpi than original, it will in fact become smaller when printed, not larger. It makes sense as you are effectively crushing the pixels into a smaller area.webtrekker;118299 wrote:If you have an image at, say, 72 dpi, then changing the dpi of the image to 300 will dramatically increase the size of the image, but this is not the right way to do things as the final result will be a blurred or pixellated image. You need an image that has a NATIVE resolution of 300dpi or thereabouts (I wouldn't go less than 200dpi for most things).
The converse is also true - if you decrease the image's dpi its print size increases.
One thing that I used to struggle with is that an image's native size on a screen is ruled by pixel count - ie a 20 x 40 pixel will be a quarter of the size of a 40 x 80 pixel image. The dpi of the image will not affect its size on screen. Print size though is affected by the number of pixels AND the dpi.
As noted above, although it is possible to increase the print size by reducing the resolution, it's rarely satisfactory unless very modest adjustments are made...
