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If you want this I will need your e mail addy to send you links

Photozoom 2.1.4

Many professionals are familiar with the problem; quality loss caused by digital image magnification. In many cases a great deal of time is spent on achieving only a fairly acceptable enlargement result, however there are familiar side effects including out-of-focus images and serrated edges which is illustrative for the lack of professional magnification software.
PhotoZoom Pro™ 2 is based on S-Spline XL: a renewed and improved version of our patented, self-adjusting, many times awarded S-Spline interpolation technology. As we did with S-Spline, our S-Spline XL technology again introduces a revolutionary breakthrough in digital image enlargement. It is able to render sharp and crisp clear image magnifications, perfectly focused, yet without the jagged edges, loss of detail or lack of photorealism that normally come with enlarging images.

2006-09-24 04:19:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Unfortunately you can't add information to a picture without distorting it. If you make an image larger, the program has to add ppixels to fill in the gaps, and its never convincing.
The more the original jpeg was compressed, the worse it will look when you enlarge it.
But you can try changing it to look like a painting by using a filter.

2006-09-24 11:22:55 · answer #2 · answered by sarah c 7 · 0 1

I scan hundreds of ordinary pictures, up to my pictures, and I always open with paint, the screen then is full of your picture, jpg, or not, paint is the one which makes em big, but not for attatching, the other end, the other person who recieves can do that. Paint does not distort the picture, and allows you to have a wondrful slide show of all your sequences. Just whatch out for the arrow turning into a pensil, you can get marks. But then you can go to Adobie, and use the clone tool or airbrush to cover them up. adobie is useful for that kind of thing, but Paint, always open yer pics iwth paint, no distortion, and if you wish you can invert the colours, which can be mild fun....

2006-09-24 11:41:12 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can't.

JPEG files are compressed to keep their file size small, this results in loss of quality which becomes noticable when the image is enlarged.

The finer details of the image are removed in the compression There is no way to return to the original uncompressed format.

If you are refering to a picture took with a digital camera then the ammount you can enlarge the picture will be related to the resolution that the photograph was took in, with a lower resolution producing a poorer quality picture whcih looks worse close up or enlarged.

2006-09-24 10:31:00 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

most photo packages will allow you to stretch the picture (example MS 'Paint' allows you to stretch the picture by a % horizontally and vertically) as long as you strecth both dimensions by the same amount, the picture will not distort. However, it may be impossible to fillo the entire screen without having either borders, or some distortion.

2006-09-24 10:28:45 · answer #5 · answered by Vinni and beer 7 · 0 1

I use a program called "Pix Resizer" It costs about $19 on the web and works excellent. You can also get a windows powertoys pix resizer for free by going to the Microsoft website and looking under "Powertoys"

2006-09-24 10:27:13 · answer #6 · answered by Samuel Crow 3 · 0 1

1024x768 million px. is the standard for a 17" screen. You will need
Photoshop, or equivalent, and interpolate to that size. If your original
is not in this 3x4 proportion your image will stretch.

2006-09-24 10:45:33 · answer #7 · answered by Ricky 6 · 0 1

t3h1 is absolutley correct. No way to do it without distortion. Give him the best answer...

2006-09-24 10:33:11 · answer #8 · answered by shelshe 3 · 0 0

U cant do it becoz of the compression nature of JPEG

2006-09-24 11:01:34 · answer #9 · answered by Martin K 1 · 1 1

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