Image quality, sometimes called clarity, in Photography is a term which often is used to describe the amount of visibility of pertinent information in an image. When judging image quality in a photograph or on a monitor we may look at sharpness or resolution, good contrast, correctness of color, gradation from black to white with what is sometimes called "long scale," and other criteria. By definition, image quality may tend to exclude such potentially image degrading impediments such as grain or noise, halation, fog or anything else that at least theoretically reduces or obscures the pertinent information in the image. Image quality can, however, be subjective.
A quality photography contains a meaningful content, good image quality (image sharpness etc, and a good composition.
Mega pixzal
Pixel density. The greater the density, the higher the quality of the image.
A JPEG image loses quality when it is opened and resaved due the compression algorithms. The more an image is opened and resaved, the more the quality can degrade. An image on a disc will not lose quality unless you resave it on a CD-RW. Opening an image to print will not affect the quality.
By reducing the size if a image
It refers to how "crisp" or clear and image / the quality of an image is.
binlear
recognition and loyalty image of size image quality
Changing the image resolution will affect the file size of the image and the quality of the image. Image resolution is measure in DPI, which is Dots Per Inch, this means that if you increase the resolution then the DPI will increase and the quality of the image will get better as a result as there are more pixels that make up the image, so the image will be more distinct and sharper. When the image resolution is increased the image has more pixels, this is the exact opposite to the compression techniques, this means that the file will get a lot bigger as the number of pixels increases. Decreasing the resolution, however, will make the image quality lower but will reduce the file size.
What factor control image quality through a film or plate processor?
Image quality, also known as print resolution, is usually measured in DPI-(dots per inch)
Depends for what the image is going to be used. If it's for a high resolution printing such as print ad in a magazine or poster TIFF format with LZW is preferred for quality purpose. JPEG format gives more options for compressing an image, especially for web usages or not for high quality printing purpose. Also it depends on the original image quality and resolution, if the quality of the original image is good, then JPEG will be a good option to use.