stunsworth Posted November 13, 2007 Share #21 Posted November 13, 2007 Advertisement (gone after registration) ...the JPEG sizes do seem to change from e.g. 3.5 Mb to sometimed 7-8 Mb after some tweking. The only way I can think this happens is by stuffing extra bits in the process somewhere Hi Alberti, Jpeg size will depend on how easily an image can be compressed. So for example a noisy image will almost always be larger than the same image with noise reduction added. Jpegs are always 8 bits per channel, so there are no extra bits to be stuffed in. Sorry if you knew this already <grin> Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted November 13, 2007 Posted November 13, 2007 Hi stunsworth, Take a look here AWB still OWB. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
fefe Posted November 13, 2007 Share #22 Posted November 13, 2007 You can see this kind ofdifference at the same ratio of compression if a soft image was sharpened a lot. JPEG compression comes from cutting low spatial frequency informations from the image and sharpening just creates a lot of high frequency spatial information that will go above the threshold set in a "high quality jpg" quantization. Most blocks of the soft image that would have been highly compressed (with info loss) just end up being compressed by the lossless part of jpeg (which doesn't compress that much). It has happened to me only with relatively soft landscapes where sharpening extracts a lot of high frequency spatial info (leaves/grass) at relatively high quality settings of jpeg. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Alberti Posted November 15, 2007 Share #23 Posted November 15, 2007 Hi Alberti, Jpeg size will depend on how easily an image can be compressed. So for example a noisy image will almost always be larger than the same image with noise reduction added. Jpegs are always 8 bits per channel, so there are no extra bits to be stuffed in. Sorry if you knew this already <grin> You are right of course but I will make some tests in changing colours (resetting the OWB) without changing sharpening. Then provide some statistics, the earlier ideas were a hunch but easily falsified. alberti Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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