Resize for Print vs. Screen: What Designers Need to Know
Pixel vs. Physical Units
- Screen: work in pixels (px). Screen size is resolution-dependent; common web resolutions use 72–144 PPI as references but pixels are the primary unit.
- Print: work in physical units (inches, mm, cm) and specify DPI/PPI (commonly 300 DPI for quality print). Final image dimensions = physical size × DPI.
Resolution and Quality
- Print needs higher resolution. For crisp prints, aim for 300 DPI at final print size; for large-format prints viewed from distance, 150–200 DPI can suffice.
- Screens can use lower pixel density. Use 72–144 PPI depending on target devices (retina displays require higher pixel dimensions).
Image Formats and Color
- Screen: raster formats PNG, JPEG, WebP; use sRGB color profile. SVG for vector graphics.
- Print: use TIFF, high-quality JPEG, or PDF. Use CMYK color profile for commercial printing; convert from RGB and proof colors before finalizing.
Resampling vs. Resizing
- Resampling (changing pixel count): Use when increasing or decreasing pixel dimensions. Use bicubic or Lanczos for downscaling; for upscaling prefer specialized tools (AI upscalers) to avoid softness.
- Resizing physical dimensions without resampling: Change print size/DPI metadata when you want same pixels to map to different physical sizes (affects print quality).
Typography and Layout
- Set type sizes in points for print; on screen use responsive units (px, em, rem). Ensure minimum readable sizes: ~10–12 pt for print body, ~16 px for web body text. Check line length and leading for legibility in each medium.
Export Best Practices
- For print: export at final dimensions at 300 DPI, embed fonts or flatten text to outlines in PDFs, include bleed (typically 3–5 mm) and crop marks.
- For web: optimize file size—compress images, use responsive images (srcset), serve modern formats (WebP), and generate multiple resolutions (1x, 2x) for different screens.
Vector vs. Raster
- Use vector (SVG, EPS, PDF) whenever possible for elements that scale (logos, icons, illustrations). Rasterize only at the required print resolution.
Color Proofing and Soft Proof
- Perform soft-proofing in your design software using the printer’s ICC profile to anticipate color shifts when converting RGB → CMYK. Request printer proofs for critical color work.
Practical Quick Checklist
- Decide final output size (physical or pixel dimensions).
- Choose correct DPI/PPI (300 for print, lower for screen).
- Convert color profile appropriately (sRGB for web, CMYK for print).
- Export formats: PDF/TIFF for print; WebP/JPEG/PNG/SVG for screen.
- Include bleed and crop marks for print; generate responsive sizes for web.
- Proof colors and test print when possible.
If you want, I can supply a one-page export settings cheat sheet for common print sizes (A4, 8.5×11”, poster sizes) and web image presets.
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