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When you take a photo the shutter opens and light hits the sensor. At that time light hits each tiny sensor and each such sensor captures that light intensity and color. Put together all those sensors create pixels that comprise a photo. When you look at a photo, if the pixels are small enough your eye blends them together to create an illusion of continuous areas of colors and intensity. When this happens photos look crisp and have a 'high resolution'. If the pixels are not small enough your eye sees individual discrete pixels. When that happen the photo is referred to as 'pixelized' meaning that each pixel is too big and the eye can see it individually as opposed to blending all the pixels together into one continuous photo. So What Determines Pixel Size? The size of the pixel is determined by the size of the photo you are looking at (for example measured in inches: width X height) and the number of pixels in the photo. In other words the size of the pixels is determined by how many pixels are spread over what size of a photo. Another measure that is commonly used to describe the size of pixels is 'PPI' (Pixels per Inch) PPI describes the number of pixels per inch in a photo. PPI is a function of the number of pixels the cameras sensor supports and the size of the photo. To calculate a photo's PPI simply multiply the page length by its width in inches. The result is the number of square inches on the page. Now divide the number of pixels the sensor supports by the number of square inches.
So How Small Is Small Enough? This depends on a few factors and sometimes creating some pixelization is wanted as an artistic effect. The pixel size that creates pixelization also depends on the distance that you are looking at the photo from. Your eye might be able to notice pixels in a photo from close by but blend all the pixels together when looking at the exact same photo from farther away. This is very easy to notice when looking at very large advertisement billboards the printed photos look very good from tens of feet away but if you stand close to the billboard you can see that it is built from many quite big pixels. A general rule of thumb though is to always make sure your photos are at 150PPI or higher. (By Ziv Haparnas)
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