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What's the point of scanning family photos at a higher resolution for later enlargement other than restoration?

Photography Asked on July 11, 2021

I have a question about an answer on Genealogy & Family History Stack Exchange. According to this blog post found at the Library of Congress:

You can scan [photos] at a higher resolution [I’m assuming higher than
600 ppi]. However, in most cases, all you will see are the defects [on
those same photos].

The blog further states that:

If the original you have to work with is a 4 x 6 inch print, and you
scan it at 600 or 1200 pixels per inch, [one] could then make the
equivalent of an 8 x 12 inch print, but it’s not likely to give you
better quality.

However, the answer to the G&FH question suggests scanning an extremely valuable family photograph at 2400 ppi to do the necessary color separations before using the same photo for the dust jacket of a hypothetical family book. Is this a useful suggestion, or does the Library of Congress advice about not scanning at higher resolutions still apply?

Is this something which makes sense only if you are going to do color separation in an image editing tool, or would there be other reasons to use a higher resolution?

Would the same advice apply to black-and-white and/or color slides? The LoC blog suggests scanning those at extremely high resolutions.

One Answer

With scanning, the DPI of the scan becomes the PPI of the digital image at a 1:1 reproduction. And 300PPI is about the limit of human vision for someone young with better than 20/20 vision (for most people/viewing conditions it's more like 200PPI). So the general recommendation was to scan at 300DPI and print at 300PPI... and that still continues today (although it is rather arbitrary). That's what the LoC post is saying.

Scanning at a resolution higher than what is contained in the image will not result in more detail. I.e. if your picture is of a white wall there is little detail to resolve, so there is no point in scanning it at higher resolutions. But if you scan the image of the white wall and print it at less than ~ 100PPI output size the resulting image may be obviously pixelated.

It is theoretically possible for a negative to contain more than 20,000 DPI/PPI of resolution (1.3 micron airy disks at f/1); but something like 1000-2000 DPI/PPI is much more common, and at something less than 1000 DPI/PPI is where an image becomes apparently degraded (unsharp). But that is at the negative size... at the print size the PPI/DPI is much less. i.e. a 35mm negative (or FF sensor) requires 7.25x enlargement to create a 10" print; and that 1000 DPI/PPI at the negative/sensor results in 138 DPI/PPI at 10" display/print (approaching readily visible degradation).

Another way of looking at the scan resolution is as magnification... if you want to do very fine/detailed restoration edits it can help to work at a higher magnification (w/o pixelation); and a 600DPI scan will be 2x the size as a 300DPI scan when viewed at the same zoom level (and when reaching pixelation). Part of the reason for editing at such resolutions/levels is so that the individual edits (dots/lines/etc) become "invisible" when the image is finally output at a lower resolution.

Whether the image is in color or B&W doesn't change any of this, nor does doing color separation. There is no benefit to scanning at a resolution higher than what you need; but there are definite negatives to scanning at less than you need. For most the question really becomes "do you know what you actually need?" And the answer is often "no, not really."... so scan higher.

Answered by Steven Kersting on July 11, 2021

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