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Professional Slideshows

Professional Image Slideshows

Higher quality slideshows with image motion (“The Ken Burns Effect”), titles, chapter markers, video transitions, music, and a unique, interactive DVD menu. Projects are tailored to individual preference.

Resolution1-99 images100-299 images300-500 images500+ images
Medium$1.75 ea.$1.85 ea.$1.55 ea.$0.75 ea.

These prices apply when our studio has to scan your images.
Medium resolution scans are scanned at a quality of 400 ppi.

PROFESSIONAL SLIDESHOW PRICING: $80/HOUR

EXTRA OPTIONS & PRICING

Creative Transitions$0.30 ea.
Quick Color Correction$0.30 per image
Quick Photo Retouching$0.50 per image
Professional RetouchingSee Professional Retouching
Professional RestorationSee Professional Restoration
Dissolve/Fade TransitionsIncluded

Professional slideshows include:
* Image motion
* Transitions between images
* Unlimited audio tracks
* Unlimited titles
* Custom, interactive DVD menu
* One DVD
* One DVD case with custom designed case insert

Looking for a basic slideshow with still images and without the bells and whistles? See our Basic Slideshow page.

Basic Slideshows
Disc Duplication
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Did You Know?

IMAGE SCANNING

  • An image scanner is a device that optically scans images, printed text, handwriting, or an object, and converts it to a digital image Modern scanners are considered to be the successors of early telephotography and fax input devices.
  • The pantelegraph was an early form of facsimile machine transmitting over normal telegraph lines developed by Giovanni Caselli, used commercially in the 1860s, that was the first such device to enter practical service. It used electromagnets to drive and synchronize movement of pendulums at the source and the distant location, to scan and reproduce images.
  • Edouard Belin’s Belinograph of 1913 scanned using a photocell and transmitted over ordinary phone lines, formed the basis for the AT&T Wirephoto service. In Europe, similar services were called a Belino.
  • Color scanners typically read RGB (red, green, blue) color data from the array. This data is then processed with some proprietary algorithm to correct for different exposure conditions, and sent to the computer via the device’s input/output interface (usually a USB).
  • High-end flatbed scanners can scan up to 5,400 ppi and drum scanners have an optical resolution of between 3,000 and 24,000 ppi. Manufacturers often claim interpolated resolutions as high as 19,200 ppi, but such numbers mean very little, since the number of possible interpolated pixels is unlimited and doing so does not increase the level of captured detail.

 

PIXELS

  • A pixel is a physical point in a raster image, or the smallest addressable element in a display device, and therefore, the smallest controllable element of a picture represented on a screen.
  • Each pixel is a sample of an original image; more samples typically provide more accurate representations of the original.
  • The intensity of each pixel is variable. In color image systems, a color is typically represented by three or four component intensities such as red, green, and blue, or cyan, magenta, yellow, and black.
  • The word pixel was first published in 1965 by Frederic C. Billingsley of JPL, to describe the picture elements of video images from space probes to the moon and Mars. However, no one is certain where the word originated.
  • The measures dots per inch (dpi) and pixels per inch (ppi) are sometimes used interchangeably, but they h ave distinct meanings, especially for printing devices, where dpi is a measure of the printer’s density of dot (ink droplet) placement. For example, high quality photographic images may be printed with 600 ppi on a 1,200 dpi inkjet printer. Worth noting is the fact that even higher dpi numbers, such as 4,800 dpi quoted by printer manufacturers do not mean much in terms of achievable resolutions.
  • The more pixels used to represent an image, the closer the result can resemble the original. The number of pixels in an image is sometimes called the resolution, though resolution has a more specific definition.

Information from Wikipedia.org.

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