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igolovin2011-12-05 11:06:28
Screenshots
igolovin, 2011-12-05 11:06:28

How to take high resolution screenshots?

Periodically I take orders for subject and advertising photography. To make the picture look good on the screens of electronic devices, I “paste” it separately in Photoshop. For the web and A4 print, standard screenshots are enough. But what if you need to make a large print of high quality? How to take high resolution screenshots? Particularly interested in the issue of mobile devices.

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8 answer(s)
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YourChief, 2011-12-05
@YourChief

print screen with an expensive lens and a reflex viewfinder

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Sergey Vorobyov, 2011-12-05
@HunterSpy

It is physically impossible to take a screenshot of a higher resolution than the screen resolution of the device, more precisely, pixels will simply repeat there and you can achieve the same effect simply by stretching the image.

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girichev, 2011-12-05
@girichev

The only way to take a high-quality picture is to draw it yourself, the GUI in PSD is full now.
What model do you need?
www.teehanlax.com/blog/ios-5-gui-psd-iphone-4s/

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Garg0t, 2011-12-05
@Garg0t

Lebedev in "Kovodstvo" has a solution for this case www.artlebedev.ru/kovodstvo/sections/155/

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Eddy_Em, 2011-12-05
@Eddy_Em

Draw a picture in SVG, business something!

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MikhailEdoshin, 2011-12-05
@MikhailEdoshin

Before the mass use of anti-alias in interfaces, it would probably be possible to take a picture and enlarge it (perhaps by choosing an appropriate enlargement algorithm and, naturally, increasing it by an integer number of times). Now, really, I'm at a loss :) I would try first to take a screenshot, enlarge it, and see what happens. If everything is really bad, then redraw in AI, then rasterize to the desired size. (Let's say, watch dials - or even watches themselves - are usually painted in print advertising. In any case, it used to be exactly like that, I don't know how it is now.)

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Eddy_Em, 2011-12-05
@Eddy_Em

Another option, if you don’t want to bother with SVG: make a printscreen, and then increase it with biquadratic (or even bilinear) interpolation. At least there will be no pixelation.

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Alexander, 2011-12-06
@Alexx_ps

There are a lot of vector elements of mobile interfaces on the Internet.

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