First step is about deciding the number of pixels. Resizing is a two-step process in FastStone. The differences are usually small but they're there. Even the estimate in the Jpeg save dialog is just an estimate as the actual on disc size will depend on the disc it's being saved to and how that drive has been formatted. It has no way of knowing what file format you're going to be saving ultimately. The image size dialog always shows you the uncompressed size. Thanks.I tried Gigapixel the other day.will try On1 also. Then when I save it as a JPG, the JPG Options dialog shows at 677KB which is close to what the final JPG size will be. When I put 1500X1000 as the size, the estimator shows it at 4.29MB. Thanks Peter.yes I have the subscription Photoshop 2022 and use Image Size.the jpg dialog box at the end (when you are saving the jpg) is accurate, but when you are in the resize dialog box, it doesn't seem to be.for instance, I just resized a larger JPEG says it is 142MB in PS but the file system says 17MB. If you have Photoshop, and it seems that you do, just use Image Size to set your pixel dimensions - usually in the 1000 to 1500 pixels in the long dimension range and when you save it as a jpeg, the dialog box will give you a very close estimation as to the final compressed size on disc. I may just have a misunderstanding of the way a resizer works.to be able to plug in a WidthXHeight and/or output size would be nice. It would be nice to have a program that actually is accurate in estimated file size (such as the 1.4GB limit on FM).PS will show something like 2.34MB when it actually sizes to 1.3 or so. I often resize photos for photo competitions and also any for here on FM.any recommendations on a good resizer? I usually resize in PS and just use trial-and-error in exporting.
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