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Known Participant
April 10, 2020
Question

Image size viewing options

  • April 10, 2020
  • 3 replies
  • 3689 views

In Photoshop 2020, when I check the image size in Megabytes (top line in the popdown window), it shows 130M, which I presume are Megabytes and not Megapixels. (image being 8256x5504 pixels).  However, when viewing the file in Finders, it shows the image size in MegaBytes being 52.4 Mb.  What is the difference ?  How could I view within Photoshop the image size in terms of actual bytes occupied in my hard drive ?

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3 replies

gloriaj14767310
Participating Frequently
May 2, 2020

Thanks to all for great info!.....I enjoy learning all the good tech stuff you have offered....I had no idea that "There's no way to calculate how big it is until its saved' nor that "A file open in Photoshop doesn't have a file format, it's just an image, a pixel array"...I do find that a bit weird, but, it is what it is...=). Since I almost never use JPEG as option, this all helps a lot...I've always been wary of automated functions offered when dealing with files; but certainly I will use this today...=).     

 

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 2, 2020

gloriaj14767310 wrote: “…I had no idea that "There's no way to calculate how big it is until its saved' ”

 

Some replies in this thread may have claimed that, but that’s not completely true. It’s why I wanted to be clear in my examples above that some Photoshop features can calculate (or at least closely estimate) how big an exported copy will be. They really save a lot of time when preparing JPEGs for specific requirements.

gloriaj14767310
Participating Frequently
May 3, 2020

Well, this is my long held "wariness" about community input.  Love the involvement and generosity, but if I could I'd have an engineer at my side most days, and even better, the person who WROTE the software (Thomas Knoll lives right here in Ann Arbor ....(!). LOL.  

Yes, funny, but I just took for granted that when I resized, that when Adobe told me the resized file size in the dialogue box...I believed them...!?😮  I go back awhile with this stuff, but changing around file info has been something I rarely mess with....especially size and especially color space.  I am predominantly a printer....

When I get back to the work today I will check out the info presented and results.   Thanks.   

fdormoyAuthor
Known Participant
April 10, 2020

Thanks for your answer.  Ny images are in JPEG with Max quality.  The reason why I want to have this info when sizing the image within Photoshop is the fact that, when uploading photos in certain web sites, the image size shall be between 25 and 30 Mb of disk space.  So my only approach so far is to use Photoshop to scale down 100 Mb files into 25 Mb for example.  In Photoshop the only way I know is to reduce the dimention in pixel.  But this reduction is fairly unaccurate since Photoshop will not show you hw much space it will take until you save it.  Between Photoshop, Lightroom, Bridge, Aurora, Luminar, Topaz or any other application, which one would be used to make the process easiest ?  

Conrad_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 10, 2020

The fact that you need the estimated file size of the exported JPEG file is the clue to the answer: You can get a file size estimate when you export, not in Image Size which is for the original file. When you export to JPEG, Photoshop has not one, not two, but at least three ways for you to estimate that JPEG export file size.

 

If you use File > Save As and choose the JPEG format, you can watch the estimated file size change as you adjust the JPEG quality setting.

 

 

If you use File > Export > Save for Web (Legacy), and choose the JPEG format, you can watch the estimated file size change as you adjust its wider selection of JPEG options, or as you adjust the height and width of the exported file.

 

 

The same export file size preview is there if you use File > Export > Export As.

 

 

Save for Web and Export As have options optimized for online use, so for exporting JPEGs for the web, those two are generally preferable. Save As includes additional metadata such as ppi that makes JPEG files bigger, so Save As is more for print, archives, etc.

 

Because the size and compression adjustments are made to the exported copy, they do not affect the original.

fdormoyAuthor
Known Participant
April 18, 2020

Your message is very instructive for me.  Many thanks.  I will take good note of your "tutiroal".  Excellent !!

PECourtejoie
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 10, 2020

Hello, the indication in the status bar is the actual size in memory.

Unfortunately Photoshop cannot calculate how the image will compress once saved on the disk, as it will depend of the file format, and the selected settings (Maximize compatibility in a PSD, compression settings in a Tiff, etc.) and of the image itself, (large areas of similar colors, details, noise, etc.

Community Expert
April 10, 2020

What PECourtejoie said.  There's no way to calculate how big it is until its saved, due to all the variables he mentioned