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Many of the people you share pictures with
might not have a way to view them unless you make
old-fashioned prints.
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technofile
Al Fasoldt's reviews and commentaries,
continuously available online since 1983
T e c h n o f i l e
What's the best way to send a digital
photo?
Oct. 12, 2003
By Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, Al Fasoldt
Copyright © 2003, The Post-Standard
What's the best way to send a
digital photo to someone else? What if the recipient says
the picture you sent can't be deciphered?
And why do some publications tell you to
send an actual print instead of a digital photo?
These are some of the questions raised
by artist Sallie Bailey in a letter she wrote asking for
help. Like many other digital photo enthusiasts, she's
frustrated by the general lack of information about this
topic.
Let's start at the beginning.
Photography used to be simple and easy to understand. You
sent someone a photo by putting a picture in an envelope
and mailing it or by handing it to them at the office or at
school. A photograph was a physical thing. You could hold
it. You could see it without the need for a machine.
For many of us, that's all changed.
When I take photos at a family picnic, I use a camera that
wouldn't know a roll of film from a hot dog bun. When I
want to see the photos I took, I can view them on a small
screen on the back of the camera or I can work some magic
and pop them up on my computer screen.
I never need to hold them in my
hand.
This is wonderful. But it's also a
sign of mindless progress. Those who don't have a way
to view my photos won't be able to see them unless I
make physical prints of my digital photos, using an inkjet
printer or a photo-printing service online.
So the basic problem needs to be looked
at this way: Many of the people you share pictures with
might not have a way to view them unless you make
old-fashioned prints. If you want to send a digital photo
to someone you don't know very well, mail a print
instead. Explain that you can send the photo in digital
form, too, if the recipient would like it that way.
When you do send digital pictures,
remember that digital photos are just ordinary files to
your e-mail software. This means your computer has to
bundle them up in an attachment that is carried along with
your e-mailed letter.
Unless they are small photos, send only
one at a time. This helps them clear the mail server and
makes things a lot easier on the receiving end. (Older
computers sometimes balk at huge attachments because they
don't have much memory.)
What format should you use? Digital
photos come in many types, called formats. The most common
is JPEG, also spelled JPG. Always send JPEG images. They
take up less space than the other formats (their files are
smaller, in other words) and they're the universal
image format worldwide. Anyone with a modern computer, no
matter what kind, will be able to view a JPEG image.
If the pictures you want to send are not
JPEGs, you can change them into JPEGs easily. Open each one
in your image software and click the "File" menu.
Look for "Save As" and choose JPEG or JPG. If
your computer asks you to choose a "quality"
setting, pick the setting that's about three-quarters
of the way up.
Bailey also asks why some publications
refuse to accept digital photos. Maybe they're just not
able to deal with them, or perhaps they're worried that
pictures they get won't have enough resolution to print
properly. I'll explain this final mystery next
week.
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