Understanding Bit Depth: Depth, Which Controls How Much Color Information That
Bit depth refers to the number of colors an image file can contain, determined by the image's color mode. Higher bit depths allow more colors. 8-bit images can contain 256 colors per channel, while 16-bit images can contain 65,536 colors per channel. More colors provide more flexibility when editing but take up more storage space and processing power. Most images are 8-bit, but higher bit depths from some cameras can be useful for editing by providing a wider color range.
Understanding Bit Depth: Depth, Which Controls How Much Color Information That
Bit depth refers to the number of colors an image file can contain, determined by the image's color mode. Higher bit depths allow more colors. 8-bit images can contain 256 colors per channel, while 16-bit images can contain 65,536 colors per channel. More colors provide more flexibility when editing but take up more storage space and processing power. Most images are 8-bit, but higher bit depths from some cameras can be useful for editing by providing a wider color range.
You may have heard the terms 8-bit and 16-bit tossed around in graphics circles (and neither has anything to do with Photoshop being a 64-bit program, as the box on page 6 explains). When people refer to bits, theyre talking about how many colors an image file contains. Photoshops color modes (page 46) determine whether your document is an 8- or a 16-bit image (other, less common options are 1-bit and 32-bit). Since youll run into these labels fairly often, it helps to understand more about what these numbers mean. A bit is the smallest unit of measurement that computers use to store information. Each pixel in an image has a bit depth, which controls how much color information that pix-el can hold. So an images bit depth determines how much color info the image contains. The higher the bit depth, the more colors the image can display. And the more colors in your image, the more info (details) youve got to play with in Photoshop. Understanding bit depth also means you need to know a little about channels, where Photoshop stores your images color info (see Chapter 5) on separate layers (Chapter 3). For example, in an RGB image you have three channels: one each for red, green, and blue. If you combine the info contained in each channel, you can figure how many colors are in your image. With all that in mind, heres a quick tour of your various bit choices in Photoshop: In Bitmap color mode, your pixels can be only black or white. Images in this mode are called 1-bit images because each pixel can be only one colorblack or white (theyre also known simply as bitmap images). An 8-bit image can hold two values in each bit, which equals 256 possible color values. Why 256? Since each of the eight bits can hold two possible values, you get 256 combinations. (For math fans: its two to the eighth power, which equals 256). Images in Gray-scale mode contain one channel, so thats 8 bits per channel, equaling 256 colors. Since images in RGB
mode contain three channels (one each for red,
blue, and green), folks refer to them as 24-bit images (8 bits per channel 3 = 24), but theyre still really just 8-bit images. With 256 combinations for each chan-nel (thats 28 28 28), you can have over 16 million colors in your RGB image. Since CMYK images have four channels, folks refer to them as 32-bit images (8 bits per channel 4 = 32), but again, these are still 8-bit images. Over 200 combinations per channel and four channels add up to a massive number of possible color values, but since youre dealing with printed ink, your color range in CMYK is dictated by what can actually be reproduced on paper, which re-duces it to about 55,000 colors. 16-bit images contain 65,536 colors in a single channel and are produced by some high-end digital cameras (digital single-lens reflex, or dSLR, cameras) shooting in Raw format (page 57) or by really good scanners. These files dont look any different from other images on your screen, but they take up twice as much hard drive space. Photographers really like them because the extra colors give them more flexibility when theyre making Curves and Levels adjustments (see Chapter 9), even though the larger file sizes can really slow Photoshop down. Also, not all of Photoshops tools and filters work with 16-bit images, but that list of tools grows with each new version of the program. 32-bit images, referred to as high dynamic range (HDR), contain more colors than you can shake a stick at. See page 414 for more info. For the most part, youll deal with 8-bit images, but if youve got a camera that shoots at higher bit depths, by all means, take a weekend and experiment to see if the difference in quality is worth the sacrifice of hard drive space (and edit-ing speed). And if youre restoring a really old photo, it may be helpful to scan it at a high bit depth so you have a wider range of colors to work with. See the box on page 57 for more scanning tips.
Hubungan Kompetensi Penyuluh Dengan Karakteristik Pribadi, Persepsi Penyuluh Terhadap Dukungan Kelembagaan Dan Persepsi Penyuluh Terhadap Sifat Inovasi