Nicely done. You get to the point, and you do it clearly and concisely. You’re talking just fast enough and going through all the motions just fast enough so we can learn. Other people should learn from you. Thank you
I was looking for something like your video, clear and to the point- and I found it. Thanks for making Pixlr layer images easy to understand to start with !
Thank you for making this so easy to understand. I am new to photography and am trying to do a "ghost" layer. I have watched other tutorials and your's is by far the easiest to follow. Thanks so much! I love working in Pixlr, btw. Definitly user friendly for beginners like myself.
Thank you so much for the feedback, Sheena - this means the world! I feel like I am still relatively new to Pixlr too but I love working with it, too. It doesn't get enough love!
I have a very basic question that I think I need to know before I even learn how to edit images. That is, how do I set a fixed canvas output size? In other words, I want fixed image size for the output that is 19 inches tall and 14 inches wide.that’s the canvas for printing that I need to fill. How and when should I set this? What’s the correct process?
In Pixlr's Advanced Editor, select Create New. You'll see a menu that allows you to customize pixel side over on the right side. Unfortunately it doesn't appear to offer an inches option, but based on the dimensions you provided I would enter a width of 2800 pixels width and 3800 pixels height. That should give you the proportions you want and produce a high-enough resolution for a printout that size. Hope that helps. - Tim
@@VARocketry Hmmm. I'm now completely out of my depth when it comes to DPI. When you say 200 my first thought is that sounds low to me ... I believe our photocopier at school offers 300 or 600. So I guess for best results I would inflate the pixel numbers I gave you 2x or 3x.
You could try Filter> Details> Clarity or Filter> Details> Sharpen which might help a little, but basically if the image was poorly shot to begin with, there's no way to magically make it higher resolution. (Please correct me if I have that wrong.)
Nicely done. You get to the point, and you do it clearly and concisely. You’re talking just fast enough and going through all the motions just fast enough so we can learn. Other people should learn from you. Thank you
Thank you so much for the kind words. I appreciate the encouragement!
I was looking for something like your video, clear and to the point- and I found it. Thanks for making Pixlr layer images easy to understand to start with !
Thanks, Tom. This means the world. If you get stuck somewhere, let me know and I'll try to help. - Tim
Thank you for making this so easy to understand. I am new to photography and am trying to do a "ghost" layer. I have watched other tutorials and your's is by far the easiest to follow. Thanks so much!
I love working in Pixlr, btw. Definitly user friendly for beginners like myself.
Thank you so much for the feedback, Sheena - this means the world! I feel like I am still relatively new to Pixlr too but I love working with it, too. It doesn't get enough love!
Thx help me so much!!!!
Glad to hear this helped!
Tysm for this!
You're very welcome! Glad it was helpful.
@@TeachersOnFire ty!
I have a very basic question that I think I need to know before I even learn how to edit images. That is, how do I set a fixed canvas output size? In other words, I want fixed image size for the output that is 19 inches tall and 14 inches wide.that’s the canvas for printing that I need to fill.
How and when should I set this? What’s the correct process?
In Pixlr's Advanced Editor, select Create New. You'll see a menu that allows you to customize pixel side over on the right side.
Unfortunately it doesn't appear to offer an inches option, but based on the dimensions you provided I would enter a width of 2800 pixels width and 3800 pixels height. That should give you the proportions you want and produce a high-enough resolution for a printout that size. Hope that helps. - Tim
@@TeachersOnFire so , if my math is right, you’re suggesting 200 dpi for a photo quality output of that size. Do I have that right?
@@VARocketry Hmmm. I'm now completely out of my depth when it comes to DPI. When you say 200 my first thought is that sounds low to me ... I believe our photocopier at school offers 300 or 600. So I guess for best results I would inflate the pixel numbers I gave you 2x or 3x.
thanks bro. funny that you are a teacher and play games and put in the rock in the thumbnail
Ha, glad you appreciated my choice of subject. Thanks for the comment.
Nice.
Thanks for your comment, Andrew Cavey!
Hey! This helped and everything, but, is there a way to fix an blurry image?
You could try Filter> Details> Clarity or Filter> Details> Sharpen which might help a little, but basically if the image was poorly shot to begin with, there's no way to magically make it higher resolution. (Please correct me if I have that wrong.)
Is there anyway you know how to do this on the iOS app
I haven't tried this on my phone, no. Thanks for the question, sorry I can't be more helpful. - Tim
So that's what they mean by the Rocky Mountains, it all makes sense now
Ha, that’s pretty good. Wish I had thought of that line when I was making the video!