On Aug 18, 2015, at 4:20 PM, Noel Chiappa <jnc at
mercury.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:
From: Sean Caron
I have found that even fairly fine detail
reproduces okay with a 300
DPI scan ... there's no need in scanning with extraneous bit depth and
then you start to get people complaining about file sizes
I have found that one can generally have one's cake, and eat it too:
if I scan at 600dpi in black and white, and then use "CCITT Group 4"
compression, the resulting images (of prints) are ~200KB per page.
Is that small enough? :-)
If you can, avoid black/white scans. The reason is that scanners are often noisy in that
mode, so you end up with very large images where the ?white? areas have lots of individual
black pixels on them. Copiers used in scan mode are particularly likely to do this. Such
documents are also surprisingly hard to read, look messy when printed, and utterly fail
OCR.
Grayscale works much better in all respects.
You can generate clean bitonal scans, but that requires careful post-processing, in
particular careful (and often page-dependent) selection of the threshold value.
paul