Resolution 350 PPI printing?

Hello

One of the main teachers in my institution had made a statement which today is the standard for a print resolution is 350 Pixels per inch and not 300 PPI, which is now an old standard.

I tried to look for more online resources for it and couldn't. As far as I know, it has been and remains 300 PPI.

I also know that when you open a new document in Photoshop (file-> new) using one of the predefined print settings you get 300 DPI by default.

My question: does anyone know about a new standard for print in addition to 300 PPI resolution? Choose a different print resolution?

Thank you!

PPI.png

We must prevent the Orange apples here. The argument of type number 300 not refer to inkjet printers, it refers to the offset printing. For ink jet, the optimal ppi will be different for different printers. I have often heard the number 360 mentioned with Epson.

Your colleague's good and bad. For the most part poorly. A particularly high quality print job, to a 175 LPI screen, would require a file 350 ppi to stick on the 2:1 ratio. But this isn't an 'ideal' report - this is just the point where a further increase in resolution will not improve the result, not even theoretically. It is the absolute maximum of useful.

Actually, you can go down to a ratio of 1.5: 1 lossless Visual significant detail and quality. It is the frequency of the line that sets the level of detail. But there is a slight possibility that you might be able to distinguish individual pixels.

Overall, not complicate it more than necessary. Tell your students to 300 and be done with it. This number is as good as any other, and there is certainly no 'new normal' 350. Not yet at least (that will come probably).

Tags: Photoshop

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