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I recently purchased a canon powershot camera (A640). I had a different canon camera before. When I look at an image through the lcd display and I zoom 100% I can see details that are not seen in the downloaded jpg image. Take hair for example. In the LCD I am able to see strands and rich details, in the jpg the hair seems more saturated, it easily looses some of those details. This happened with my previous camera too. I have a 24 inch dell monitor at 32 bit colors (I don't think it is a monitor display issue)... is there a fix? How can I get what I see in the viewfinder to be the same to what I download from the memory card?

2007-01-04 20:22:18 · 7 answers · asked by Sucrit S 1 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

7 answers

Whatever you see in the LCD should have less quality than what you have actualy stored in the jpg. There is no way to make a jpg look better than what you have to begin with.

If I had to guess I would guess it is your monitor. I don't know what the pixel depth of your monitor is but it has to be less than the LCD (which is possible). Try it on another computer/monitor and see what you find.

2007-01-08 09:34:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

one element you want to pay interest on is the HD format which you would be procuring. in case you would be that near to the television which you should to choose for a 1080P television fairly of a 720P. i do no longer understand what the ratio is on the television's which you're finding at yet commonly in case you have something over 40 inches it somewhat is a mind-blowing thought to bypass with a 1080P television. 720P heavily isn't sufficient. I surely have a 40 two inch 1080P Toshiba Regza and it seems perfect from 8 - 10 ft. in case you would be truly close the better definition is truly surely worth the better fee. in case you would be removed from it you could bypass with the decrease definition set on the 40 inch yet i does no longer do a 720P for the 40 six inch television. you may no longer be pleased with the end result. A 40 inch television is sufficient length sensible. you truly won't understand for confident till you're taking it domicile and set up it.

2016-11-26 20:45:24 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You're probably not looking at the pictures in jpeg format on the camera, however, you are when viewing on the computer. See if your camera has the option besides jpeg because jpeg is a lossy compression scheme.

2007-01-04 20:48:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

The LCD screen on the A640 has quite a low resolution of only 115,000 pixels...so, I cannot understand how you could compare what you see on the screen to the actual photo (jpeg) itself. Just make sure you are shooting your photos in Superfine Large.

Or maybe it IS the monitor.
Or maybe I have completely misunderstood what you are exactly trying to say???

2007-01-05 02:11:28 · answer #4 · answered by Petra_au 7 · 0 1

check the camera settings first..check the frame size..800x600 is the min resolution for a good qulaity picture...above which u get the better ones..check for software settings that u use to download the picture...last open the same picture with 'mspaint' on windows and see if u see the same quality.(on wondows --> start --> run --> type 'mspaint' --> hit enter ---> select file --> open the picture file

2007-01-04 20:27:55 · answer #5 · answered by victor_04 2 · 0 1

jpeg is a LOSSY compression method. try to dl your pics for the camera in the TIFF format, or uncompressed. you may see difference there.

2007-01-04 20:33:03 · answer #6 · answered by Zeta Reticuli 3 · 0 1

downloaded jpg

2007-01-04 20:25:42 · answer #7 · answered by Sonu G 5 · 0 1

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