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ado-stan-be
Inspiring
March 2, 2017
Answered

Lightroom exporting incorrect image size

  • March 2, 2017
  • 5 replies
  • 8586 views

Hello all,

I am having an issue with exporting from Lightroom. Here's what I'm doing:

  1. I'm starting with a TIFF of arbitrary resolution that has an embedded print size in inches (let's say 16" x 20"). If I open it in Photoshop and go to "Image Size", I can confirm that the print size is 16" x 20".
  2. I'm exporting it from Lightroom as a TIFF with default options.
  3. It looks like the "Resolution: ___ pixels per inch" setting in Lightroom export always stays the same and never changes, even if my TIFF had a different pixels per inch setting. So the exported TIFF is an incorrect size when I open it up in Photoshop and go to "Image Size". It will still be the same aspect ratio, but will be a totally different size, which is an issue because I need to print these.

I can't apply the PPI or image size manually per image because I need to do this to hundreds of images at a time.

I tried searching online and then getting help from Adobe Chat but they were unable to help - I'm currently waiting on a reply to my request for escalation to someone knowledgeable with Lightroom. Can any of you product experts here help? Any insight would be very appreciated!

Thank you for reading.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer ado-stan-be

Hi all, in case anyone has a similar issue in the future, this was actually solved by johnrellis​ in another thread of mine. I started that thread with the intention of tracking down Exportant, a plugin by the late Rob Cole, but johnrellis​ pointed out I could use a combination of the Run Any Command plugin and Exiftool to replicate the exact functionality I was looking for. I can now export an unlimited number of images from Lightroom and preserve their original print dimensions / DPI.

Thank you to everyone who took the time to contribute to this thread - hopefully it will be a wealth of knowledge for internet searchers moving forward!

5 replies

Chlorophil
New Participant
August 26, 2018

i had same problem but figured out under image size keep at 100% and same resolution u want it like for me 300 dpi and that shuld work, at first i had raw files at 300 saving at 90 dpi and rather keep them at 300 dpi so i figure that is easiest way to keep it same size

ado-stan-be
ado-stan-beAuthorCorrect answer
Inspiring
March 10, 2017

Hi all, in case anyone has a similar issue in the future, this was actually solved by johnrellis​ in another thread of mine. I started that thread with the intention of tracking down Exportant, a plugin by the late Rob Cole, but johnrellis​ pointed out I could use a combination of the Run Any Command plugin and Exiftool to replicate the exact functionality I was looking for. I can now export an unlimited number of images from Lightroom and preserve their original print dimensions / DPI.

Thank you to everyone who took the time to contribute to this thread - hopefully it will be a wealth of knowledge for internet searchers moving forward!

ado-stan-be
Inspiring
March 3, 2017

Hi everyone, thanks so much for your detailed explanations and information you've provided. I have another thread in this forum that some of you have also posted in, and am currently exploring the few options you uncovered to get Lightroom to do this (most of this exploring is pending responses! ). I'm feeling a little less optimistic now that this is possible, but am holding on to some hope.

Please let me know if you think of anything additional that I could use to preserve the source image's print dimensions when exporting from Lightroom!

Todd Shaner
Brainiac
March 4, 2017

I use EXIFtool GUI and noticed it has a menu Export/Import command to 'Copy metadata into all JPEG and TIF files.' This looks like it will overwrite the pixel Resolution and inch Dimension (and other metadata) to LR Export files saved in a separate folder with the metadata from the original files in located in its own folder. I haven't tested it so using folder with "copies of your original files and exported files. Make sure to also backup all original image files as a safety precaution.

It's a Windows resident GUI so no command line knowledge required.

ExifToolGUI

Latest ExiftoolGUI version 5.16

Todd Shaner
Brainiac
March 4, 2017

I finally had a chance to test the ExifToolGUI Export/Import tool for copying the Resolution metadata from original files into Export files. It works and is easy to use!

1) Export the files to a separate folder.

2) Open the folder in ExifToolGUI and select one of the files.

3) Go to menu Export/Import and select Copy Metadata into all JPG or TIF files.

4) Click yes if you've placed some of the Export files into multiple subfolders. If they are all in one folder click 'No,'

5) In the 'Select any of source files' popup navigate to the folder that contains the original files, select one of them, and click on 'Open.'

6) In the below popup select 'Exif image Resolution data' and hit 'Execute.'

7) Done!

JP Hess
Inspiring
March 2, 2017

The PPI setting has no relevance in this situation. Changing the PPI will not change the quality of the image. You need to be concerned about the number of pixels in the image. For example if you want to print a 16 x 20" print with a resolution of 300 PPI then you need an image that measures:

16 X 300 (PPI) = 4800 pixels

20 X 300 (PPI) = 6000 pixels

If the image has those pixel dimensions then the PPI setting has no effect on the quality of the print. You may find that a print that large doesn't need to be 300 PPI. But you will have to be the judge of that.

ado-stan-be
Inspiring
March 2, 2017

Thanks for your reply Jim! I believe I'm following you with regards to DPI not changing the quality of the image - it's the same number of pixels at 300 DPI as 100 DPI, they'll just print at different sizes. This is the crux of my issue though. I have many different files saved as TIFFs, all of which know the exact print size and DPI of the image contained in them, and the print size and DPI are different for every one. One may be 16" x 20" at 137 DPI, another might by 24" x 36" at 300 DPI. There are hundreds of these, all of which I need to export from Lightroom. Do you know of a way to do this, while preserving the DPI info contained in the file when it was imported into Lightroom? I can't set it manually for each one, and do one at a time.

To elaborate further, I discovered that a plugin used to exist (no longer available) called Exportant by Rob Cole seems to have the feature I need. I wrote about it in my reply to dj_paige. Would you mind taking a look and seeing if you know of how I can accomplish this?

Thanks in advance for any info you may have. A solution to this issue would help me a great deal.

Brainiac
March 2, 2017

If you are using default settings to export, there is NO SUCH THING as pixels per inch. Digital photos do not have inches, they only have pixels. You are looking at a meaningless (as in, it has no meaning whatsoever) ppi number. Ignore it.

Your photos that are exported this way can be printed at any ppi you want.

ado-stan-be
Inspiring
March 2, 2017

Hi dj_paige, thanks for your quick reply! I'm referring to the "Resolution: ___ pixels per inch" in the File Settings section of the Export window. It's unfortunately not possible to disable this option - it's always there.

What I want to do is start with one TIFF file that's 16" x 20" (regardless of resolution, regardless of PPI, I have multiple pieces of software including Photoshop that correctly interpret this file as 16" x 20") and let it be a 16" x 20" TIFF file after the export. I know I could set the PPI manually and have the result I want for this one file, but I need to do this for hundreds of files. All of them have different PPI values when printed at their intended sizes.

A user named Rob Cole answered a similar question here: Lightroom 5: export isn't resizing exactly to specified long edge. | Photoshop Family Customer Community

Unfortunately, he has since disappeared. He had a plugin called "Exportant" (I believe) that has a feature called "Maintain Original Resolution - Export (print) resolution to be the same as original source photo, regardless..." and then it cuts off. But it sounds like this is exactly what I want - I want the export PPI to be the same as the original photo, regardless of anything else. Do you know of any way to accomplish this? Thank you in advance for anything you can think of.

JP Hess
Inspiring
March 2, 2017

I think you are still looking at this the wrong way. First of all, you need to have the images cropped to the 4 X 5 Crop ratio. Then, just set your export options to the long side being 6000 pixels or the short side being 4800 pixels, and you're done. The PPI setting has no impact whatsoever on the quality of the image. It's simply a number to be used to allow Photoshop to calculate the size of the image at any given pixel setting.