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Digital Prints

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50<br />

Mastering <strong>Digital</strong> Printing<br />

Viewing Distance & Visual Acuity<br />

Another aspect of printer resolution commonly overlooked is the relationship between<br />

viewing distance and visual acuity.<br />

Viewing Distance: It matters how close you or your viewers are to your prints. Consider<br />

the ubiquitous billboard that could be printed at a high resolution but never is. If you’ve<br />

ever seen a billboard up close, you know that the dots are huge. Yet, billboards are perfectly<br />

readable at the distance from which they are meant to be viewed—across the street<br />

or driving down the road.<br />

The key point here is that you don’t need more printer resolution than you need. Normal<br />

people will stand back to view a large image, and they will get up close to a small one. This<br />

means that larger or fewer dots are more acceptable on big prints destined to be viewed<br />

from further back.<br />

If you’re wondering how to estimate standard viewing distances, photographer Joe Butts<br />

gives this formula: 1.5 × the diagonal dimension of the art piece. To calculate the diagonal,<br />

it’s a2 + b2 =c2 . For example, to figure the viewing distance for an 8 × 10 print: 8 squared<br />

plus 10 squared is 64 plus 100 equals 164 inches. The square root of 164 is 12.806 or<br />

rounding it off, 12.8 inches. Multiplying by 1.5, the viewing distance would be 19.2 inches<br />

(see Table 2.2). Similarly, the normal viewing distance for a large 40 × 60-inch print is<br />

about 9 feet. You won’t see many dots from there!<br />

Viewing distance, however, is only one-half the story.<br />

Viewing distance can have an impact<br />

on the choice of printer resolution.<br />

Courtesy of Joe Nalven<br />

www.digitalartist1.com

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