The way you work and explain things must be the way my noggin works as I often end your videos with very few questions. On most educational vids I end up with twice as many BUT questions as I started with. The recap at the end is a great addition it really helps my learning style. Thank you for your time and have a peaceful and productive day.
Again, it would be nice to see a Phlearn Export for Print video. There's a lot of photographers (like me) that want to send their images / files to a print-shop and we pray for a good wall-hanger in the mail. I am a Phlearn Pro subscriber and have asked several times for this content. I guess seeing those nice prints behind Aaron got me thinking about it again. Anyway, great video for those seeking likes on the web...
Just change the resolution to the resolution of your printer. Also change the image color profile to CMYK. Normal printer resolution is 300dpi. That's all you have to do for print. Just to clarify, this is for home/office paper printing, based on the this video. Resolution varies based on print material, color varies based on printer and technique used such as color separation. I believe most printers still use Pantone colors for commercial print? For web, a resolution of 72 is sufficient. For a printer, 300 is, but there are cases where you might need upto 1200 dpi.
It doesn't seem that easy or as straight forward to me. Export settings, JPEG, TIFF? Color space, sRGB, Adobe1998, Pro-photo, CMYK? Sharpen Yes/No? Printer profiles, Costco vs Print Lab vs Pro Home Printer? Paper types vs Metal vs Acrylic vs glass vs canvas. Everyone wants to share their images on the web and I get that. I just think these videos should end with a web and print option.
I've been printing with wide format machines, Xerox, and offset printers for over 12 years. Getting colors and images set up for print is like learning Photoshop all over again. The amount of variables going into color and quality are endless. My advice. Stay consistent with your workflow as well as the printer (company) you use. Trial and error will be inevitable as you start. Image formats should be pdf or tiff. If pdf, I recommend pdf/x-3a, 4a, or even pre press. 1a will convert all color spaces to cmyk and might not get as vibrant a print as you would like. If your printer has a cmyk color machine (most likely) you'd think embedding a cmyk color space is the obvious choice which isn't always the case. Cmyk files tend to be quite a bit "duller" and gives a flat look. Keep in mind many wide format machines actually use more than 4 colors with additions such as light magenta, light cyan, and light black. With these machines, the color conversion happens within the machines algorithms itself. Sometimes, a file embedded with rgb colour space will be converted into cmyk in a better fashion than what Photoshop will do with its "change mode" option. Black and white images *almost always* have to be colour corrected for a satisfactory result. I'm barely scraping the iceberg and can understand why Aaron might be hesitant on a tutorial. It really is a whole other world of expertise.
I thought I knew everything there was to know about saving to web, and i've avoided the save to web tool, but you've really shown what' ive been missing all these years. Thank you.
a very cool tutorial, just as always:) I am a Phlearn pro subscriber, and just as one guy has mentioned, I would love to see more complex and hard tutorials in phlearn pro, just like the portrait of a 'liquid girl'. A kind of tutorials where you need to have a huge skill (Although doing as Aaron tells us everything seems way easier:) ), and where the photo is manipulated in several ways, including coloring as well. I feel that in those tutorials you sometimes do not understand everything super clear, as even doing as Aaron said it sometimes does not get so good (but that's because the lack of working in ps), but then you are forced to focus more on a video, rewatch the tutorial, make those same image adjustments. so yeah, overall, I would be super glad to see more Phlearn Pro tutorials for more advanced users:) And keep doing that as well, I believe in this project so much and feel that this is the best thing in the whole Internet:)
Thank you very much! This is the best and detailed explanation, very practical video. One question: Can we do overall sharp on full size image (finish all work flow on full size) then resize and sharp image again for export to web application?
Hi Aaron! Hi Phlearn Team! Thank You for the awesome work that I am not sure if I will be able to get all in this lifetime!!! Question: When all process is complete and if I would like to change the aspect ratio - Will I have to do it before sharpening? Cheers
May I request knowledge form the nerds of electromagnetic light. Its now 2020 many sites are accepting 2024px & nearly every browser is colour space savvy. Is the recommendation of 800 and sRGB becoming legacy? My 2nd question is is Save for web now, legacy as many pros are pushing the File > Export > Export as dialogue box. My 3rd question if I may, how do you acquire the WEBP file format which is making Jpeg legacy.? I can find it but it never installs photoshop CC says its an unrecognised file. I greatly appreciate any help given I hope you have a peaceful day.
Thank you for the tutorial. I just have to ask something: What's the difference between Apply image and Merge visible? And is there any? Because it looks like it does the same thing. Thanks :)
Hey Aaron . . . great vid! Always solid production value, and thorough teaching. I do have one minor quip though: after duplicating the initial image to a new file (to then resize and sharpen), why wouldn't you first convert that new file to sRGB to check the color shift from the original color space to the new one, so that you can make necessary changes in sRGB before saving? Seems like "Save For Web" and relying on that for an sRGB conversion just overlooks the resulting color shift in the new web file. Thoughts?
i down sized my original art image from 300 to 72 resolution and found like u said i lost all my resolution in file size i do art work and i almost died any way long story here i am it seems to work now i'm goig to try to up load to insta gram and twitter hope it look good
the is no difference. They do the same thing but one is just a quicker way. Sometimes you find the shortcut way doesn't work on some when some people try it. was a bug which i had once and the hassle to try contact abode about it / find an answer was becoming a hassle so apply image it is lol
I love PHLEARN for the timely update of videos, but I want to request a video. how to easily covert a design done in photoshop from CMYK to RGB for separation printing. thanks
I'm a PHLEARN PRO subscriber and I miss the old days when Aaron did advanced tutorials and didn't explain everything like he was talking to five year old kid. I respect the fact that you aim your tutorials towards the inexperienced crowd, but there are more advanced users watching (and paying for) your content and we don't have problems following along. Fair enough, you can do it on UA-cam, but why would you treat viewers of pro tutorials like they were beginners? That being said, I still love you PHLEARN, just miss the old, crazy, fast talking version of Aaron.
Jack Suchodolski Well there are people who still don’t presumably know how to do these kinds of stuff, So he is trying to help people out with some quick tutorials. 🙂
I note that your original file was already 72 dpi. Most of my originals start at 300 dpi. When is the best time to change to the screen resolution of 72? I usually do it when I downsize the entire image. Should I wait to sharpen until I change to screen resolution?
I would keep your original file always at the highest dpi- when you export for web, by default it should change to 72 for you. I hope that helps when possible always keep the highest resolution!
DPI is NOT resolution! Working with digital images DPI is not relevant until you decide to actually print them. 3000px are 3000px no matter of what your DPI setting is. Export your file with a given resolution in pixels at 300dpi and 1dpi. There will be no difference at all.
@@NicoKaiser True. However it does affect file size. When exporting to the web anything higher than screen resolution of 72 dpi is useless and only results in a larger file.
@@k2jwdno it doesn't. If you specify the physical dimension of your export file in pixels then the dpi setting has no effect at all on the file size. Go try it yourself. Exporting at 3000px x 3000px and all other settings identical at different dpi values will result in identical files
Nice tutorial. Wondering why you chose to export a jpg instead of placing a linked image? That way if you wanted to change anything you could easily keep your images consistent by editing the original + save time.
Love the way you're presenting these tutorials. It's a wonderful agenda to follow!! And love the wrap up at the end. Great methodology! Is there a location of the pixel sizes for facebook, instagram, twitter, printing, general computer settings, your 55 inch TV?
I wish Save For Web (which shouldn't be legacy) has a sharpen option built in so you can so the resizing and sharpening in the same dialogue with no need for a new document. Something like Lightroom's Sharpen For Web export option.
@@magdalenaprettycripple549 nope! Command/Ctrl+J duplicates the seelcted layer, without prompting any other options - like duplicating in a new document, for example. Command/Ctrl+Alt+Shift+E literally creates a single merged layer out of all the currently visible layers, above whichever layer is currently selected :)
We enjoy a great deal your UA-cam channel tutorials here at Condo Cooking Minute we make one minute videos with simple recipes for beginners. We have to shoot under the kitchen counter lighting of T 5 fluorescent tubes that have a strange spectrum unlike the sun's continuous spectrum. We are struggling with color correction. Any ideas, suggestions or actual preset LUTS you can suggest?
Ok. I’m doing something wrong. My photo looks AMAZING when I export but once I upload to web/fb etc. It becomes blurry again. I tried several sizes and quality formats. Still not solving my problem.
Or, way less convoluted and far less steps, just export from Lightroom after you save your master Photoshop edit, check the sRGB box, change size to desired output resolution, then check Output Sharpening box, select screen and amount standard. Done. For web it will be indistinguishable from your method.
@@naritcom, I've been thinking the same thing each time someone mentions Lightroom in the comments on PHLEARNS's tutorials. I wish I could give you more than 1 thumbs up.
Lightroom messes up the size of my copyright notice for different size images. I prefer Photoshop where I have complete control and can see what it's going to look like.
Tony H Photoshop is not the right tool for the job for this. Lightroom, Capture One, OnOne Raw, et al all have export features designed for this purpose.
Bob Koss I find watermarks to be worthless in terms of theft prevention and highly distracting to look at so I guess I’d say just don’t do that in the first place. I also find if one must add this you have a lot of layout options for adding watermark in LR export dialog options. I’ve never seen it look bad or messed up as you say. To each their own on that though. 😊✌️
Hi! If I would intend to sell prints, wouldn't this be like a deceiving advertisement? (the better they look on the web, the worse they look printed🤣🤣🤣). Any comment will be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Shouldn't the export feature be smart enough to apply those things in the right order when you export to a smaller size? I mean, I know there will be a difference, but it would be great if it was just all automated when you export for a smaller screen, for example...
Hey Aaron . . . great vid! Always solid production value, and thorough teaching. I do have one minor quip though: after duplicating the initial image to a new file (to then resize and sharpen), why wouldn't you first convert that new file to sRGB to check the color shift from the original color space to the new one, so that you can make necessary changes in sRGB before saving? Seems like "Save For Web" and relying on that for an sRGB conversion just overlooks the resulting color shift in the new web file. Thoughts?
You are the man! The tip about clicking the preview button to see how the image displays in a browser is new to me and SO useful! Thank you.
Your recaps at the end are first rate. Nobody else does that (that I've seen), and it's so helpful.
The way you work and explain things must be the way my noggin works as I often end your videos with very few questions. On most educational vids I end up with twice as many BUT questions as I started with. The recap at the end is a great addition it really helps my learning style. Thank you for your time and have a peaceful and productive day.
Thank you , I love that you summarised it at the end . Thanks
Again, it would be nice to see a Phlearn Export for Print video. There's a lot of photographers (like me) that want to send their images / files to a print-shop and we pray for a good wall-hanger in the mail. I am a Phlearn Pro subscriber and have asked several times for this content. I guess seeing those nice prints behind Aaron got me thinking about it again. Anyway, great video for those seeking likes on the web...
I would also like to see an Export for Print video.
Just change the resolution to the resolution of your printer. Also change the image color profile to CMYK. Normal printer resolution is 300dpi. That's all you have to do for print. Just to clarify, this is for home/office paper printing, based on the this video. Resolution varies based on print material, color varies based on printer and technique used such as color separation. I believe most printers still use Pantone colors for commercial print? For web, a resolution of 72 is sufficient. For a printer, 300 is, but there are cases where you might need upto 1200 dpi.
It doesn't seem that easy or as straight forward to me. Export settings, JPEG, TIFF? Color space, sRGB, Adobe1998, Pro-photo, CMYK? Sharpen Yes/No? Printer profiles, Costco vs Print Lab vs Pro Home Printer? Paper types vs Metal vs Acrylic vs glass vs canvas. Everyone wants to share their images on the web and I get that. I just think these videos should end with a web and print option.
I've been printing with wide format machines, Xerox, and offset printers for over 12 years. Getting colors and images set up for print is like learning Photoshop all over again. The amount of variables going into color and quality are endless.
My advice. Stay consistent with your workflow as well as the printer (company) you use. Trial and error will be inevitable as you start.
Image formats should be pdf or tiff. If pdf, I recommend pdf/x-3a, 4a, or even pre press. 1a will convert all color spaces to cmyk and might not get as vibrant a print as you would like. If your printer has a cmyk color machine (most likely) you'd think embedding a cmyk color space is the obvious choice which isn't always the case.
Cmyk files tend to be quite a bit "duller" and gives a flat look. Keep in mind many wide format machines actually use more than 4 colors with additions such as light magenta, light cyan, and light black. With these machines, the color conversion happens within the machines algorithms itself.
Sometimes, a file embedded with rgb colour space will be converted into cmyk in a better fashion than what Photoshop will do with its "change mode" option.
Black and white images *almost always* have to be colour corrected for a satisfactory result.
I'm barely scraping the iceberg and can understand why Aaron might be hesitant on a tutorial. It really is a whole other world of expertise.
I thought I knew everything there was to know about saving to web, and i've avoided the save to web tool, but you've really shown what' ive been missing all these years. Thank you.
Fantastic back to basics tutorial. I've been a Photoshop user for about 15 years, but I picked up some great tips in this video. Thank you Aaron.
Very helpful! I always sharpen before resizing. I'm trying this now!
That was amazing, Thank you for sharing all this.
Fantastic tutorial. I've been saving my images and posting them and unhappy with how they look after. Couldn't figure why. Thank you!
Brilliant as always. Thank you!
Very Helpful and Well Explained! Thank you
Another excellent video!
Love the recap brother!
Thank you so much for sharing, this is something ive been struggling with so your tutorial was a huge help to me.
Good Video! Helped a lot.
Hey Nace! Love the new background! Thanks for the tips.
Nice ! Thanks for sharing
Your the king Aaron!
amazing tutorial
a very cool tutorial, just as always:)
I am a Phlearn pro subscriber, and just as one guy has mentioned, I would love to see more complex and hard tutorials in phlearn pro, just like the portrait of a 'liquid girl'. A kind of tutorials where you need to have a huge skill (Although doing as Aaron tells us everything seems way easier:) ), and where the photo is manipulated in several ways, including coloring as well. I feel that in those tutorials you sometimes do not understand everything super clear, as even doing as Aaron said it sometimes does not get so good (but that's because the lack of working in ps), but then you are forced to focus more on a video, rewatch the tutorial, make those same image adjustments.
so yeah, overall, I would be super glad to see more Phlearn Pro tutorials for more advanced users:)
And keep doing that as well, I believe in this project so much and feel that this is the best thing in the whole Internet:)
Arron the type of guy to add a little bit of color before he exports
Great Video! Thanks from a PS Beginner. :-)
Still my favourite Channel for learning stuff! Fun, Friendly and Great information with practical results
I'd love an opportunity to be #2 on that list 😂💪😇
Arron, you ARE AMAZING!!!
I like the way how you explain your informations, you are very neat and clear thanks
Love your videos, you are the best :)
Thank you very much! This is the best and detailed explanation, very practical video. One question: Can we do overall sharp on full size image (finish all work flow on full size) then resize and sharp image again for export to web application?
Thank you for this excellent tutorial
Hi Aaron! Hi Phlearn Team! Thank You for the awesome work that I am not sure if I will be able to get all in this lifetime!!!
Question: When all process is complete and if I would like to change the aspect ratio - Will I have to do it before sharpening? Cheers
Do the same rules apply for preparing an image for television?
Thank you so much for this video.
LOL, this is happening to me every time !!! Thanks for this man good tutorial as always!
Great tutorial! Thank U, Aaron.
really nice tysm
great tutorial again, thanks
Thank you.
This is incredibly informative. Thank you!
May I request knowledge form the nerds of electromagnetic light. Its now 2020 many sites are accepting 2024px & nearly every browser is colour space savvy. Is the recommendation of 800 and sRGB becoming legacy?
My 2nd question is is Save for web now, legacy as many pros are pushing the File > Export > Export as dialogue box.
My 3rd question if I may, how do you acquire the WEBP file format which is making Jpeg legacy.? I can find it but it never installs photoshop CC says its an unrecognised file.
I greatly appreciate any help given I hope you have a peaceful day.
How do you know what size you need for each platform?
Thanks Aaron
Thank you for the tutorial. I just have to ask something: What's the difference between Apply image and Merge visible? And is there any? Because it looks like it does the same thing. Thanks :)
I'll try this next time around : )
Love ur vids
Great video. Thank you very much. What graphics tablet are you using there? (:
wacom intuos pro m
Саша С Thank you. 🙂✌🏻🙏🏻
Hey Aaron . . . great vid! Always solid production value, and thorough teaching. I do have one minor quip though: after duplicating the initial image to a new file (to then resize and sharpen), why wouldn't you first convert that new file to sRGB to check the color shift from the original color space to the new one, so that you can make necessary changes in sRGB before saving? Seems like "Save For Web" and relying on that for an sRGB conversion just overlooks the resulting color shift in the new web file. Thoughts?
Couldn't quite understand the reason of creating the new layer& document, then resizing - can't you just resize to 800px when you export ?
Great video. Which kind of trackpad are you using?
Would be great if there was a resume of the best sizes for each of the main web based uses - eg Instagram, Facebook, standard browsers. Thanks Aaron.
Definitely. We like this article on social media sizes: sproutsocial.com/insights/social-media-image-sizes-guide/
@@phlearn Brilliant article, many thanks Aaron
Great tutorial, but I have a problem with save web legacy, error message always pop up, anyone has the solution?
Thanks!!!
Really enjoyed this... Quick question:does this applies for print too, I mean to want to retain your artwork's colors and all
i down sized my original art image from 300 to 72 resolution and found like u said i lost all my resolution in file size i do art work and i almost died any way long story here i am it seems to work now i'm goig to try to up load to insta gram and twitter hope it look good
thank you, just used this
What's the best size for Flickr?
what is the difference between apply image to composite snapshot (ctrl-alt-shift-E)?
the is no difference. They do the same thing but one is just a quicker way. Sometimes you find the shortcut way doesn't work on some when some people try it. was a bug which i had once and the hassle to try contact abode about it / find an answer was becoming a hassle so apply image it is lol
I love PHLEARN for the timely update of videos, but I want to request a video. how to easily covert a design done in photoshop from CMYK to RGB for separation printing. thanks
Whats it mean when 'Save for Web Legacy' is Not clickable??
is there any way that i can do it directly in Lightroom
I'm a PHLEARN PRO subscriber and I miss the old days when Aaron did advanced tutorials and didn't explain everything like he was talking to five year old kid. I respect the fact that you aim your tutorials towards the inexperienced crowd, but there are more advanced users watching (and paying for) your content and we don't have problems following along. Fair enough, you can do it on UA-cam, but why would you treat viewers of pro tutorials like they were beginners? That being said, I still love you PHLEARN, just miss the old, crazy, fast talking version of Aaron.
Jack Suchodolski Well there are people who still don’t presumably know how to do these kinds of stuff, So he is trying to help people out with some quick tutorials. 🙂
I think I might have some more advanced tutorials that might wet your whistle 💪🙏😇
@@kromsofficial I'm thinking that you really didn't 'read' what Jack wrote. He's referencing the PRO SUBSCRIPTION tutorials.
Dave Dube my bad sorry haha,
I note that your original file was already 72 dpi. Most of my originals start at 300 dpi. When is the best time to change to the screen resolution of 72? I usually do it when I downsize the entire image. Should I wait to sharpen until I change to screen resolution?
I would keep your original file always at the highest dpi- when you export for web, by default it should change to 72 for you. I hope that helps when possible always keep the highest resolution!
DPI is NOT resolution! Working with digital images DPI is not relevant until you decide to actually print them. 3000px are 3000px no matter of what your DPI setting is. Export your file with a given resolution in pixels at 300dpi and 1dpi. There will be no difference at all.
@@NicoKaiser True. However it does affect file size. When exporting to the web anything higher than screen resolution of 72 dpi is useless and only results in a larger file.
@@k2jwdno it doesn't. If you specify the physical dimension of your export file in pixels then the dpi setting has no effect at all on the file size. Go try it yourself. Exporting at 3000px x 3000px and all other settings identical at different dpi values will result in identical files
@@NicoKaiser pure gold, thanks
my colors don't even stay the same when i just export it out of Ps 😔 of course i embed the color profile. can't find a fix anywhere.
Nice tutorial. Wondering why you chose to export a jpg instead of placing a linked image? That way if you wanted to change anything you could easily keep your images consistent by editing the original + save time.
thanks a lot..
i think for fb i cant get anything better than PGN-24 idk why JPEG gets blurry and pixelated ?
when I try to upload it to Instagram after that, it doesn't do it? something else I should do?
Your awesome
Love the way you're presenting these tutorials. It's a wonderful agenda to follow!! And love the wrap up at the end. Great methodology! Is there a location of the pixel sizes for facebook, instagram, twitter, printing, general computer settings, your 55 inch TV?
Here is a wonderful guide on social media sizes to get you started: sproutsocial.com/insights/social-media-image-sizes-guide/
I wish Save For Web (which shouldn't be legacy) has a sharpen option built in so you can so the resizing and sharpening in the same dialogue with no need for a new document. Something like Lightroom's Sharpen For Web export option.
Instead of using Apply Image, can't you just use Shift+Option+Command+E ?
You can also just go to Edit->Duplicate and duplicate merged layers to get to the same place.
Yes I thought the same thing. Also isn't Command J the same thing?
@@magdalenaprettycripple549 nope! Command/Ctrl+J duplicates the seelcted layer, without prompting any other options - like duplicating in a new document, for example. Command/Ctrl+Alt+Shift+E literally creates a single merged layer out of all the currently visible layers, above whichever layer is currently selected :)
Also, a shortcut to the legacy Save for Web dialog is Command/Ctrl+Alt+Shift+S
Thanks for taking out the time to comment. @@GabrielMisfire
We enjoy a great deal your UA-cam channel tutorials here at Condo Cooking Minute we make one minute videos with simple recipes for beginners. We have to shoot under the kitchen counter lighting of T 5 fluorescent tubes that have a strange spectrum unlike the sun's continuous spectrum. We are struggling with color correction. Any ideas, suggestions or actual preset LUTS you can suggest?
7:02 is when the exporting starts
Ok. I’m doing something wrong. My photo looks AMAZING when I export but once I upload to web/fb etc. It becomes blurry again. I tried several sizes and quality formats. Still not solving my problem.
hi AAron can you put some of old pro toturials in youtube
master
I messed with opacity for the unsharp mask and found it easier to control. Just my 2 cents.
Or, way less convoluted and far less steps, just export from Lightroom after you save your master Photoshop edit, check the sRGB box, change size to desired output resolution, then check Output Sharpening box, select screen and amount standard. Done. For web it will be indistinguishable from your method.
Not everybody has or wants to use Lightroom, thats why it's called a Photoshop tutorial
@@naritcom, I've been thinking the same thing each time someone mentions Lightroom in the comments on PHLEARNS's tutorials. I wish I could give you more than 1 thumbs up.
Lightroom messes up the size of my copyright notice for different size images. I prefer Photoshop where I have complete control and can see what it's going to look like.
Tony H Photoshop is not the right tool for the job for this. Lightroom, Capture One, OnOne Raw, et al all have export features designed for this purpose.
Bob Koss I find watermarks to be worthless in terms of theft prevention and highly distracting to look at so I guess I’d say just don’t do that in the first place. I also find if one must add this you have a lot of layout options for adding watermark in LR export dialog options. I’ve never seen it look bad or messed up as you say. To each their own on that though. 😊✌️
I mean which kind of text should we and colors to make any design attractive
Hi! If I would intend to sell prints, wouldn't this be like a deceiving advertisement? (the better they look on the web, the worse they look printed🤣🤣🤣). Any comment will be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
Lightroom and Capture One can also automatically sharpen your images when you export them... That's way faster...
1000 layers, are a tad much isnt it?
هذه خريطة الجزائر سبحان الله
Shouldn't the export feature be smart enough to apply those things in the right order when you export to a smaller size? I mean, I know there will be a difference, but it would be great if it was just all automated when you export for a smaller screen, for example...
Sir pleas make ad designs tutorials
how to edit car photos
if i do this it looks horrible - basically me trying out different effects in ps
☠️BLACK BARON☠️My 🇺🇸INTEL 🔥CPU is getting hot and my fans are spinning. What is this nonsense tech?
Typography and colors concept something like commercial ads
Hey Aaron . . . great vid! Always solid production value, and thorough teaching. I do have one minor quip though: after duplicating the initial image to a new file (to then resize and sharpen), why wouldn't you first convert that new file to sRGB to check the color shift from the original color space to the new one, so that you can make necessary changes in sRGB before saving? Seems like "Save For Web" and relying on that for an sRGB conversion just overlooks the resulting color shift in the new web file. Thoughts?