Re: How to scale up a TIFF? You seem to specialise in understatement.. (O: That's a 53x enlargement.....! Some programs like QImage, will do the best *possible* job of upscaling.. but.. frankly, you are asking for the ridiculous/impossible. It will look like cr@p. And why do you specify 400 dpi? That is a very fine quality level, for a very large print. Assuming you weren't restriucted by your original, at a size of 1m you could probably drop to 150-ish dpi and it would look ok. How close are the viewers going to be? Of course if the original is only 300 pixels, then dreaming about 400dpi at any size larger than about a playing card is just fantasy. Ok, maybe that changes things. What exactly is it? A logo? If so, it *should* probably be vector-based, and if it is in vector form the problem will pretty much vanish. No, won't help. If it is a bitmap, just converting it to EPS will leave it that way. ...but... Yes, probably. As long as it doesn't contain significant 'photographic' content. There are various 'vectorising' functions in drawing/illustration programs - i'm sure someone else will chime in on that. If it's a simple design, maybe you could just get it re-created cheaply or even do it yourself. Not quite sure what you mean..? Powerpoint can use most images, vector-based or bitmap (and certainly won't require 16,000 pixels) so I presume this is a secondary requirement? Like I said, you could simply get it re-drawn as a vector. 'Fairly sharp', on a print of 1m square, would probably mean somewhere about the 100-150 dpi level I referred to earlier. But if the viewers are, say, a metre away then even 50 dpi would probably look ok. Without seeing what you are talking about, or what it will be used for, I can't really guess. Mark.thomas.7@gmail.com
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