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daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 4, 2023
Answered

Images Sizes for Adobe Stock

  • June 4, 2023
  • 3 replies
  • 13174 views

Just curious. I prefer to upload images to Adobe Stock that are 300 dpi at 30" along the long side. But now and then, images that large begin to degrade, but look fine if they are at 300 dpi at 14" or 15" along the long side. Are those acceptable or would they be rejected?

 

[Moderator moved the thread to the correct forum]

Correct answer Nancy OShea

First of all, what are you submitting?  Raster images  -- Jpg?  Or Vector graphics - - .ai, .eps, .svg?

 

Photography should always be captured at highest camera settings available and exported to sRGB color JPG without altering its height x width in pixels.

 

Generative AI must be high resolution diffusion from the start.  Midjourney's high-res diffusions are approx 2800 px wide.

 

Vector graphics however are resolution independent. What does that mean?  It means math-based graphics can be re-scaled to any size needed without quality loss.

 

 

3 replies

Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Nancy OSheaCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
June 4, 2023

First of all, what are you submitting?  Raster images  -- Jpg?  Or Vector graphics - - .ai, .eps, .svg?

 

Photography should always be captured at highest camera settings available and exported to sRGB color JPG without altering its height x width in pixels.

 

Generative AI must be high resolution diffusion from the start.  Midjourney's high-res diffusions are approx 2800 px wide.

 

Vector graphics however are resolution independent. What does that mean?  It means math-based graphics can be re-scaled to any size needed without quality loss.

 

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
daniellei4510
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 5, 2023

I submit upscaled AI images by way of Lightroom (also using AI upscalers≠. I aim for 300 dpi at a maximum dimension of 30" along the longest edge. I have a .047% rejection rate (some of which were uploaded at 72 dpi by accident). I'm well aware that AI images in particular are judged with additional cautions and limitations and that is understandable. I follow all the rules. I'm relatively new to Adobe Stock, so I don't have a huge number of images uploaded at this point but I've sold a few. Quality is extremely important to me. But I have created some good images that look horrid at 300 dpi @17278815" wide or long, but look fine at, say 14" at the longest side. Will those be rejected outright or can those be accepted if they meet all other requirements? In other words, this is about physical size, not DPI or PPI or whatever.  I understand how all that works. 

Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.
Nancy OShea
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 11, 2023

I'm gonna put myself out there, Nancy. Attached is a section of an AI image that was enlarged using Photoshop Neural Super Zoom and Topaz AI Sharpen, in addition to some pixel by pixel editing in Photoshop. The notes are included in the image. So tell me...is the resulting enlargment worse, at least as good, or better than the original? I'm open to your input. I've been using Photoshop since the day it was first released (like, when when we had only ONE level of undo, as opposed to dozens or even a hundreds...yeah, I'm that old), Thanks!


I've been using Photoshop since it came out on Windows -- a long time ago.

 

Was this image rejected?  What was the reason?

 

Others here may have different opinions.  IMO, the enlarged version is too dark, too soft and lacks sufficient detail for commercial print purposes. Compare yours with current Stock inventory.

https://stock.adobe.com/search?k=%22human%20eye%22

 

Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
Legend
June 4, 2023

Adobe Stock should have a big message "PPI IS NOT RELEVANT". Really, it is not relevant. Ignore all the web pages which claim it is a measure of quality. Adobe require a minimum size of 4MP (megapixels not MB as some people read it) - be sure you reach that size. Don't reduce it, images of 50MP are welcome.

But there may be something you are not saying. Perhaps you are increasing the size in pixels to reach your target. You MUST NOT do this, Adobe forbid it. Keep your photo, or generative AI, at the original size in pixels - or crop it as needed.

Abambo
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 4, 2023

If I understand your request well, you are a contributor.

 

When uploading pixel assets, you should upload them at the highest resolution in pixels as created. You should not resample the asset: you should not enlarge, you should not scale down (change the pixel values).

 

The DPI value (it is indeed the PPI value, but never mind) can be set at any size you like, as it is a completely senseless parameter for our use. Something like 200 or 300 dpi is OK. But it would change nothing in the image quality if you would set it at 1200dpi or 1 dpi. This is true as long as you do not resample the asset.

 

Anything else does not make sense.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dots_per_inch

ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer