![]() ![]() SOLIDWORKS PV360 outputs JPGs at 96 dpi and TIFs at 300 dpi. Don’t worry about going above 300 for most needs since the human eye can’t see those dots. Commercial printers have standardized on 300 dpi so that is what we would want to output when providing print ready images. ![]() ![]() The more dense the dots, the higher quality the image. ![]() Web images are fine at 72 dpi whereas print images usually need to be 300 dpi.ĭPI or Dots Per Inch comes from printers laying physical dots on a physical paper – today an interchangeable term is PPI or Pixels Per Inch for digital images. There are typically two types of outputs that many users deal with – web and print ready images. Output size will greatly affect clean edges and lines depending on the application of the image. Here’s what I provided them with suggestions to get their final render.Ī blog post written about all of the subjective areas would be many pages long so we’ll skip the camera, appearances, scene and lighting selections but focus on the output size. Setting up the initial render is quite easy but getting those final touches on the final render can be a bit frustrating. I recently had a support call with one such user who just couldn’t get that final render to come out with their desired results with cleaner edges and lines. Even though SOLIDWORKS Visualize is out, there are still plenty who will continue to use PV360 for some time. ![]()
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