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Known Participant
September 13, 2017
Answered

Building huge image (8ft x 10ft). Memory limits now appear. Need advice.

  • September 13, 2017
  • 1 reply
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I am creating an image in PS CC 2017 that I want to print by at least 8 ft x 10 ft (about 2.4 m x 3 m) at high resolution -- high enough that a viewer standing close can see key details. I have set the resolution at 200 px/inch. When I try to save a multi-layered working file at this size, I get an error saying I am out of memory and can't save a file larger than 2MB.

I am skeptical, but I'm not confident. I am running an early 2008 Mac Pro with 8GB memory, 7378 MB RAM available to PS, 70% designated for PS use. I also have a dedicated PS scratch disk, which PS sees with 334 GB free.

Have I missed an obvious detail?

Have I set my file specs too high? Years ago an expert told me that 180 px/inch is all that is really necessary to give the viewer high resolution detail, and I have followed that guideline for a long time because it seems to work. (I often set the resolution a little above 180, which is why this file is 200 px/inch.) BUT I have never worked at this scale before -- 3 ft x 9 ft has been my largest before now.

Can I work with smaller files yet end up with high resolution in the final image? Am I missing a clever trick?

I would appreciate any guidance. Thanks.

David Habercom

Boston MA

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Correct answer D Fosse

That's roughly 19000 x 24000 pixels. Nobody needs that much. You can safely drop ppi to 100, and even that may be overkill. Generally, people always vastly overestimate resolution requirements.

Even if you did need that, those specs aren't nearly enough. 8GB RAM won't even get you started. For this you should have at least 32, and a very fast scratch disk with at least 500GB free (because that's where most of the load will be, irrespective of RAM). Understand that this is a huge file.

1 reply

D Fosse
Community Expert
D FosseCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
September 13, 2017

That's roughly 19000 x 24000 pixels. Nobody needs that much. You can safely drop ppi to 100, and even that may be overkill. Generally, people always vastly overestimate resolution requirements.

Even if you did need that, those specs aren't nearly enough. 8GB RAM won't even get you started. For this you should have at least 32, and a very fast scratch disk with at least 500GB free (because that's where most of the load will be, irrespective of RAM). Understand that this is a huge file.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 13, 2017

Here's the deal. You want people to be able to walk right up to this. But they won't do it! The brain simply refuses to do that, because it wants to take in a reasonable part of the whole. Otherwise you can't make any sense of what you see. It's like using a microscope on a magazine page.

As you walk a few steps away, resolution requirements drop really fast. At 60cm / 2 feet, anything above 100ppi will be so crystal sharp you can cut yourself on it. A meter away, 72 will do splendidly.

Known Participant
September 13, 2017

You have given me plenty to think about, and I think I can make this project work based on your observations.

However, in this case I do want viewers to see the whole and be drawn into the detail enough to get close — though the 2 ft. you mention will likely be close enough. Think of the 19th Century Hudson River School paintings, which commonly showed great swaths of nature with small human details scattered about. Frederick Church’s “Heart of the Andes” below is a case in point. If you zoom in on even this small jpg you can see a village in the distance, a woman at a cemetery, and a tropical bird perched in a tree on the left. Viewers always walk up to these grand old paintings to take in the details.

That said, Church’s dimensions in this painting are 5.5 ft x 10 ft — notably smaller than in my opus — and the scene doesn’t suffer from the more modest size. I think I would do well to reconsider my ambitions. That combined with your insights about resolution should get me out of the woods.

I appreciate the help.

David