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When i zoom in on my pics they go all blurrie is there any programs or any way to fix this?

2007-09-20 02:55:42 · 7 answers · asked by wakeeskater 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Photography

7 answers

whenever you zoom into an image thats more than 100%, it will get pixelated, or blurry because your not viewing it at 100%. Are you trying to enlarge your image? If so, when you enlarge an image, you are creating or adding "digital info" that didn't exist before. So, it compensates by making up pixels near the original pixels. It will always get blurrier, and you will lose detail and clarity when enlarging images. As a rule of thumb, you should never enlarge an image due to loss of quality unless you know how to properly do it - there are techniques you can use with photoshop, however STILL results can be iffy. I always try to keep my original images as large as I can.

2007-09-20 03:29:45 · answer #1 · answered by Triple Threat 6 · 1 1

two possibilities:

1. you zoom your optical zoom to the max and when you zoom in even further, it's the camera that interpolates the zoom (this is called digital zoom) and like most of us know, digital zoom suck.

Some camera allows you to turn off digital zoom. If your camera have this, turn it off. It's useless.

2. it could be that your camera allows a very long focal length for your lens (big zoom level) which is at the same time will "enhance" the motion of your hand when you're shooting with the camera. Or in other words, it's the camera that is shaking that creates the blur.

One of the easiest way to reduce this problem is know how to shoot a picture properly. Hold your camera with both hand, use the viewfinder and prop your camera against your face. When you take the picture, hold your breath. This will help for a certain level.

Some camera that have image stabilization feature can help this, but to a certain level only.

A tripod will help, but it still won't make moving object sharp. They will still be blurry.

Flash photography would also help. But it's not always recommendable because natural light is always the best.

2007-09-20 03:30:52 · answer #2 · answered by dodol 6 · 2 1

The more you zoom in the more still you have to be. I'm figuring it's that simple this ans to your question. If ya tain't got a tripod, lean camera on table or tree or some railing. My camera is 12X optical zoom, so I have to be quite still and likewise my subject.
Possibly increase your ISO setting a bit to allow for somewhat faster shutter speed.
OR if your ISO setting is way too high like 1000, you may want to lower it to arond 100.

2007-09-20 10:42:49 · answer #3 · answered by Vintage Music 7 · 0 0

Sounds as though you have a low megapixel camera. The fewer the pixels the more noticeable they become at higher magnifications. A photo at 4x6 may be perfectly acceptable but at 8x12 its 4X bigger so any imperfections are magnified 4 times (4x6 = 24 sq. in.; 8x12 = 96 sq. in. Divide 96 by 24 = 4). As you "zoom in" you see the individual pixels. You get a similar effect shooting at very high ISO values, i.e., 800, 1600, 3200.

If your camera is a low megapixel one you might try shooting at the lowest ISO setting such as 50 or 100.

A good visual example would be to cut 2 identical rectangles the size of your sensor in a piece of cardboard. Place them on another piece of cardboard. Fill one rectangle with sugar and the other with rock salt (like you use to melt ice on your sidewalk). The sugar represents a high megapixel or low ISO; the rock salt represents a low megapixel or high ISO.

2007-09-20 03:39:03 · answer #4 · answered by EDWIN 7 · 0 1

THe way to fix it is to increase the pixels for each photo. When you take a digital picture, it only takes in a certain amount of information per quare inch, which is measured in DPI. If you take a low resolution photo, then you can't zoom in very far before those dots become visible. My suggestion: increase the size of the photos you are taking.

2007-09-20 03:03:52 · answer #5 · answered by Lambert Lewis Strether 2 · 0 3

Re-focus.

2007-09-23 16:35:08 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

tripods all the way!

2007-09-20 12:05:10 · answer #7 · answered by Steve C 1 · 0 1

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