My latest additions:
Adding characters, groups and synopses to:
Lucifer (2000): 21, 22
Adding characters and groups to:
Lucifer (2000): 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28
Moderators: DarthSkeptical, Fnord Serious, Chris, spid, Skyhawke, Darth Kramer, mikebo


angeltread wrote:every wed when uthor and i get our comics we always do a a high quality scan of the covers and put in a 600px wide cover in the database... although half the time we just replace someones retarded 200px wide one that they put in there earlier in the day. i do it everytime on amazing spider-man. its usually after midnight wed when i put it in and there is always a dumbo 300 px cover or less in there.
in addition to that ive been replacing all kinds of random low quality low res covers with a nice 600px wide one with actual scans of the book i own.

Fnord Serious wrote:What do you use for compressing the files? I find that with Save for Web in Photoshop, using a cover image that is only 450 px wide I have to lower the quality to about 50% in order to get it under the 100kb limit. How do you get 600 px images saved at 100kb without them looking all low res?
Areala wrote:Fnord Serious wrote:What do you use for compressing the files? I find that with Save for Web in Photoshop, using a cover image that is only 450 px wide I have to lower the quality to about 50% in order to get it under the 100kb limit. How do you get 600 px images saved at 100kb without them looking all low res?
For my purposes, Photoshop's "Save For Web" feature does all the heavy lifting for me. The trick is to scan the image in at a decent resolution (I use 300 dpi when I do my covers) before you start editing them. A typical comic cover that I scan at 300 dpi gives me a pixel width generally greater than 1200 px, so my first job when I do a "Save To Web" is to drop that to 600 px width. That takes away an enormous amount of the file size right there. The higher the resolution the image was scanned at, though, the lower you can set Photoshop's image quality percentage without getting that "low res" look. So start with larger and better quality, and you can scale those images down a lot further than if you scan at the default screen resolution of 72 dpi and tend to scale down from there.
Hope that helps!
Edit: Also, I'm adding some reviews for "Transformers" issues. Slow going, but I managed to put in three last night.
*huggles*
Areala
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