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2

Saving Image from PSD to Jpg dramatically reduces size

Participant ,
Feb 14, 2024 Feb 14, 2024

I have a PSD file that is 722.9 MG when I click on the "Get Into" of the file. When I open the file, and then export is as a JPG, highest quality of "7", the resultant file is only 100.3 MG when I click on "Get Into." What is going on, and is there a way to preserve the same size when exporting to JPG?

 

 

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Participant ,
Feb 14, 2024 Feb 14, 2024

ps. I have a large selection of files with the same basic situation, so it's not isolated to this one file.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 14, 2024 Feb 14, 2024

JPG is compressed, thus a smaller file size.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 14, 2024 Feb 14, 2024

"preserve the same size when exporting to JPG"

No, there isn't. JPEG is a format that reduces file size while maintaining visual quality. That's one of the reasons why JPEG exists in the first place. JPEG uses lossy compression, which means it reduces the image quality every time you save it. You can find more information about compression and JPEG format online.
If you want to save your image with maximum quality and compatibility, you can try using TIFF. It is a format that most applications support, but web browsers do not.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024

You are right.

I would add that the LZW Tiff compression is non destructive…

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Community Expert ,
Feb 14, 2024 Feb 14, 2024

Jpeg compression is incredibly effective, which is why it still exists despite its serious drawbacks.

 

It can shrink a file down to 2 - 5 % of native size, with very little immediate visual degradation. But it's there, and with repeated saving the file will eventually disintegrate. Good for one-off final delivery to save bandwidth, but not suitable as a working archive format.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024

Size and weight is not the same thing.  Why should a JPEG which is compressed have the same weight than a PSD file?

If you mean size just check the pixels wihich are the only way to measure an image.

Note than sometimes large PSD file with small size are use smart objects. If you open the smart object and check its size you will be surprised not to have the same pixel width than the PSD.

You may work on a 1920 px width size in which a smart object integrate a 5000 px width.

Recently I recovered 5 Go on my SSD just by changing smart objects sizes to match PSDs sizes…

😉

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024
quote

When I open the file, and then export is as a JPG, highest quality of "7"

7 is not the highest quality. 

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024

Actually it is, in Export As.

export_as.png

 

Save For Web still has 0-100.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024

I do apologize, I hadn’t considered that option. 

 

That Photoshop offers at least three different options for jpg quality (in »Save a Copy« it’s 1-12) seems a bit peculiar. 

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024

I don't blame you, Christoph, I never use Export As either, so I had to go check. It's still an unfinished building site, with bugs and things that don't work. Don't know why they can't just finish it. Meanwhile, Save For Web still works perfectly.

 

I just remembered that this 1 - 7 scale has come up before.

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Community Expert ,
Feb 15, 2024 Feb 15, 2024
quote

What is going on, and is there a way to preserve the same size when exporting to JPG?

By @craigpmhere

 

Just for context, the question is interesting because many people actually complain about the opposite:

 

“My 100K JPEG file became a 32MB Photoshop file!”

or

“My 8MB raw file became a 76MB TIFF file!“

 

In all cases the answer is the same: The size of an image file depends on things including:

Bits per pixel

Number of channels

Is it using compression?

If it’s using compression, is it lossless or lossy?

If it’s lossy, what compression/quality level was selected?

 

In the case of your Photoshop file vs the JPEG version, the answer is the Photoshop file uses lossless compression, and JPEG uses lossy compression.

 

Many people intentionally use JPEG because it can make a Photoshop file size small enough to post on the web or send in email. For them the dramatically reduced file size is the specific reason they chose JPEG.

 

If you are concerned about the file size becoming that small, what is your reason for converting it to a format other than Photoshop format? Do you need to preserve more quality, or layers, or something along those lines? Maybe there is another format that would better meet your requirements.

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Participant ,
Feb 21, 2024 Feb 21, 2024
LATEST

Just seeing your response and question now. Thank you. I'm using the file for a Print on Demand service that only accepts jpeg files, and they need to be between 15-300 DPI, and of a certain size depending on the product I'm printing on. After speaking with the Print on Demand service I finally concluded that I just need to go with the size of the jpeg file, just as it is. Fortunately the original tiff files are quite large, so in the end the jpegs are just large enough for what I need.

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