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hi

Community Beginner ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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7680x7680

export as jpg

Quality 10 maximum

Resolution High (300 ppi)

unable to export at this resolution please lower the resolution and try again problemUntitled.png

 

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Community Expert ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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deepakamba,

 

Are you actually aiming at a JPEG image that is 2,304,000 px by 2,304,000 px?

 

If you actually wish to have 7,680 px x 7,680 px, you can export at 72 PPI or at 1x or use legacy Save for Web.

 

Keeping the full quality, of course.

 

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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No widh 7680
High 7680 pixels yes

I want high (300 ppi)

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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I saved the file at 7680 but showing 16000.. don't know why..

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Community Expert ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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If you want a 7680 pixel image, do as Jakob said, export at 72ppi.

If you want the resulting image to have a resolution of 300ppi change that in Photoshop without resampling.

You will have the same amount of pixels of which every 300 are squeezed into an inch.

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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Thanks for the tip! 

72ppi this Quality v clean really???

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Community Expert ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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It is the amount of pixels that is important.

Resolution only says something about the size when it gets printed.

resolutions.png

 

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Community Expert ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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deepakamba,

 

"72ppi this Quality v clean really???"

 

The following goes beyond the original question, and it may sound unforgivably outdated and boring, sorry;


If you wish to have PNGs (PNG24 (also (little) known as PNG32, it holds 24 bit colour and 8 bit Alpha channel (transparency)), of course) look crisp and clean, at least when it is (also) to be used at moderate screen resolutions, it is important to have the images in the exact desired final pixel x pixel size, or at sizes that are powers of 2 times as large (2x, 4x, 8x, and so on, the larger values can improve the appearance on high resolution screens and still ensure best possible appearance at low resolution screens); forget about resolution which may actually lead to wrong sizes and hence blurriness, or work at 72PPI or powers of 2 times as large (144PPI, 266PPI, 576PPI, and so on).


It is easiest and safest to work at the desired size when creating the artwork.


It is important to remember that a raster image represents the whole appearance, including strokes, so to make sure you get it right you can click Show Preview Bounds in the General Preferences (and untick it afterwards).


A very common unsuitable way is to Export to PNG (remember to use PNG24 and use Transparency for artwork to be in front of different backgrounds) with a medium or high resolution, such as 300PPI.


And a common misunderstanding: (almost) 11 out of 10 times, a statement like "I created the document at 300 PPI" means that the value is chosen in Effect>Document Raster Effects Settings; however that only means that the (current) resolution of any raster effects applied to the vector artwork, such as (any kind of) Blur, is set to that value (and only unless/until the value is changed to something else); when zooming in, this resolution can be seen in contrast to and on the background of the vector artwork. So this setting has nothing whatsoever to do with the actual resolution of a raster image created from the (vector) artwork (but it ought to (at least) match it).


For clean and crisp artwork avoid JPEG.


It is also important to have the artwork and also the Artboard placed fully within integer/whole pixel X and Y values in the Workspace, which means that the X and Y values at the corners must be integer; this can be ensured by using one of the corner Reference Points in the Transform palette, and then checking that all the values X, Y, W, and H, are integer (the centre Reference Point can only be used if both W and H are even numbers).


Otherwise the resulting image will become a bit wider/taller and the extension(s) will be empty and therefore be (partially) transparent/white.


Therefore, the safest way is to create the artwork at the final pixel x pixel size and use a corresponding Artboard, then use the Legacity Save for Web (where you can look in the Image Size window for size confirmation and possibly multiply by 2, 4, 8, whatever), or use Export at 72PPI (or 144/288/576/whatever PPI), or use Export for Screens (in either way). In either case, use the relevant optimization (available with both ways); it is also convenient to have 72PPI (or 144/288/576/whatever PPI) in the Effect>Document Raster Effect Settings.


If you have pure vector artwork, you can relax a bit and have the artwork/Artboard at any size (the Artboard must have the same proportions as the final image), then use the Legacity Save for Web and set either Width or Height in the Image Size and Apply (make sure the other value is also correct).


The Legacy Save for Web may be an old carthorse, but it knows its way home, even if the driver is drunk and sleeping it off in the hay in the back.

 

Or you can switch to SVG, if applicable.

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/search-results.html?q=svg&scope=%5B%22helpx%22%5D&subscope=%5B%5D&limit=10&s...

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Community Beginner ,
Jun 26, 2021 Jun 26, 2021

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What will you do 150 ppi

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Community Beginner ,
Jul 06, 2021 Jul 06, 2021

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72ppi better thanks

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Community Expert ,
Jul 06, 2021 Jul 06, 2021

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Thank you for sharing, deepakamba.

 

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