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I am currently trying to design the artwork for a billboard which they require to be • Size: 208 pixels high x 704 pixels wide • Color Mode: RGB • Resolution: 72 ppi .
I have tried insert my logo and pictures that are at 3000+ pixels and once I resize I receive pixelated images. I have tried bicubic and bicubic sharper with no resolution. Attached is a screenshot of what is going on. Would appreciate any insight, Thanks
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This png you posted look like only part of you logo and the png is 796px by 636 nearly 4 times wider then your resized logo a blow up that has pixilated. A billboard 208 pixels high x 704 pixels wide How big are you going to paint in these pixels so the image will be billboard size. Where are you coming from are you a troll?
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We would need more information:
- is this meant for a web banner (not a billboard-->print)?
- are you allowed to use SVG for the web banner?
If you are required to deliver a 208x704px web banner or graphic, and your logo is scaled down to that bitmap size, it is obviously going to look pixellated. That is the nature of the beast: low resolution bitmap --> low resolution art.
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It is meant to be on a digital billboard and that is the file size they are requiring me to deliver. They have done a previous billboard for us but now want to charge for the revision and change so I thought i would save and do it myself. They only accept jpg, bmp, png.
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A 208px x 704px is an image with a Aspect Ratio 13:44 narrow and tall. 208x704px not many. What is a digital billboard is 208x704 all the pixels the billboard displays. here is what 208px by 704px displays on your digitals display,
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208 is the height displaying the wide billboard shape as attached, keep in mind that is a screenshot not the exported file
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You did not answer What is a digital billboard is 208x704 all the pixels the billboard displays. What physical size is it.
You started statin. 704x208 72DPI the would make your billboad 9.778" by 2.889" that is a very small billboard.
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Ah, of course! DIGITAL SIGNAGE!
Like this one:
In that case a couple of tips:
Like this:
This results in a VERY low resolution billboard, but it is quite effective, and very bright.
Simply stated, you CANNOT retain the same sharpness as your original artwork/logo. You MUST scale it down into that tiny photoshop image, and you MUST adjust it manually if details are too subtle and lines too thin.
You can adjust the sharpness by applying a sharpness filter. You can create more contrast with more obvious contrast-rich colours. You SHOULD NOT use a white background - too bright, and often not allowed.
And make sure to "test" your sign design by placing it in a dummy sign/image:
Here is one:
Just open this in Photoshop, then copy and place your finished sign image and use free transform to fit in into the grey area. Finally, set the layer blend mode to "Overlay". This will give you an indication whether things are too small or not.
This should help you on your way. Again, you MUST design your billboard design in a 704px width and 208px height Photoshop document. No way around that. It's the PHYSICAL resolution limit of that digital billboard.
Good luck! When you send your image to them, make sure to test it on a test digital billboard first. The above dummy image is only for rough testing and get an overall feel of the end result.
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And to emphasize, after all these good things you need to do, what you DON'T do is zoom in to an image (any image) and complain it is pixellated. You zoom in to see the pixels. That's what are always there, that's why we zoom in, to see them.
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In other words the digital billbord resolution is much lower the 72DPI it only displays 704x208 pixel in a very large area. Its pixels are more like 72 pixels per yard the display about 30'x9'
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Try making layer of logo a smart object (right click on layer, convert to smart object). It will save the size inside, and you can resize it Shift+T without pixelation in the main file. Any time you can flatten it, and as I remember it may save the vision of pixels same