![]() ![]() I just wanted to show you what it looks like. But, you’re not viewing photographs at 400% or up close so this is not noticeable. Same with the scanned photo above, even when printed. When you really zoom in you can see how the edges of the windmill are affected. Taking an old scanned image and being able to print even up to an 8-by-10 inch might be useful and it was something I could print at home on my Epson ET-8550. Here are a couple of examples: Example 1: Resizing a scanned 2-by-3 inch old photograph ![]() Most of the functions show a preview as you hover over or click on them which helps you see the effects of what you are doing. I really found this to be quite user-friendly and easy to understand. So, that is what I am basing this all on. On1 resize vs software#My process for learning new software is to just open it and press buttons, move sliders and see what happens. ![]() After that you have your Reset All, Cancel and Done. Next is a soft proofing button and the preview button. A zoom slider to zoom in on the image you’re working on (there is also a Zoom function box above your image). Bottom menu optionsĪlong the bottom, you’ll see a search box for presets. Next is the Export icon which opens up the export dialogue and gives you quite a few options for exporting your image. There is a share icon if you want to share your image directly to Message, Airdrop, Notes, Add to Photos, Reminders, SmugMug, etc. When you click on that it opens up your print dialogue box. In the bottom right corner, you’ll find the resize icon which is highlighted when you are working in that module. Here is also where you’ll be able to input the resolution you need in pixels/inch or pixels/cm. You can choose these in inches, centimeters or millimeters. Under that is a Common Sizes panel where you can select paper, photographic, square or video dimensions. The Photo Size is automatically updated if you choose a preset, or you can resize dimensions based on the long edge, short edge, width, height, megapixels or percentage. Under the Nav/Levels/Info tabs are the panels where you can customize your image depending on the outcome you want or what you’ll be doing with the final resized shot. Below that is your ISO, shutter speed, aperture and exposure compensation. And, Info is the last menu item that has a short EXIF data list to include, camera make/model, focal length, date, time, image size in pixels, file size and type of image (in my case, JPEG/CR2/DNG). Then is the Levels panel to show your image histogram. The preview panel can show you Nav (navigation) which shows where you are in the image. To the right are the tools where you’ll do most of your customizing. Pretty standard and straightforward options under each of these menu headings. You’ll find that in the bottom left corner, click on the hide left panel option and the preset panel no longer shows.Īcross the top are the usual options - File, Edit, Photo, Settings, View, Window and Help. You have the option of hiding this preset panel if you’d like. On the left you’ll find the crop tool, the view tool and a list of print presets. There are not an overwhelming amount of options, dropdowns or sliders. The UI design of ON1 Resize AI is a simple layout.
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