I suggest something slightly different but you need photoshop software.
Using photoshop you open a good quality fig (if bad quality it will not improve when you put it in 300 ppp)
Once opened with photoshop , you go to "image size" (top up in tools bat) and there is an option, you click in it and a display is opened in wich you select directly 300 ppp and the size. This image attached may help: you should click in one of the last 4 options (all are 300 ppp). Then "save as": tif without layers (no compressions are needed). In the attached fig "pulg" (4x6, 5x7 pulg..) refer to inches
I use IrfanView a free program https://www.irfanview.com/ for converting many photo . You can convert images between different formats, also batch crop, change size, set dpi, change color depth and more. From file menu chose batch conversion,rename/advanced/set new dpi and set it to 300 or more. As shewn in the following screenshots
For one Image you can use the following sequence, from file menu , open file, from image menu select resize/re-sample change dpi as you need. As shown in the following screenshots
Hi dear Mohammad Zakwan, you can simply create 300 dpi in MS power point. First you have to change MS power point setting (see the attached video reference).Simply paste the image or graph as editable (keep source formatting and embed workbook) and save as tiff or JPEG as per your requirement. It will show 300 dpi clear image.
I think using the Photoshop program is the best way to set the exact DPI value on your images. First, open your 96 DPI image in Photoshop. Then go to 'Image' tab and select "Image Size" and set the resolution on 300 DPI (Pixels/Inch) and then save it.
If you are still stuck with this, I would like to share my Python code for high resolution (default: 300 dpi) conversion.
Just place the script inside the PHOTOS folder like the idea of Kristofer Lasko Kristofer Lasko . With the installation of Python 3, all you need is simply run 'python high_resolution_conversion.py'. It will automatically change the resolution of all images to 300 DPl.
Here's the link to the code: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1IE--yuRS3KA1oMsvTcWKokuwnKiLz9wv?usp=sharing
Once I uploaded a figure, I couldn't withdraw it. When I pressed the convert button, I lost my figure without getting any outcome. I wouldn't recommend using the site.
Volkan Yilmaz I tried the converter tool but the image I got had a different background with some of the labels gone; any idea of what to do in this case?
I agree with @ Sajjad Raeisi . Export your graph or chart/diagram (from excel or copy from Powerpoint to Excel) using the toolbox. It is free and great!
The answer depends on the platform/os You're using. In macOS, the basic image viewer allows changes in dpi and resolution. For windows there are multiple softwares (adobe photoshop etc.) as well as online tools.
I tried all options listed here. Finally figured out an easy way of doing it is to copy paste all your images into GIMP and do an export as (tiff or jpg) and save the image. Then you can crop the images.
I followed Bhaskar Tripathi tips; I downloaded GIMP and installed, then copied the graphs to GIMP which was automated at 300 dpi, from file I selected export as, then select tiff, and finally exported to my choice folder. This process worked. Thank you Bhaskar Tripathi .
The easiest way is to save the single page Word document containing the figure to pdf. Fill the Word document page with the figure. In pdf, go to File, Export...
Next, Format as TIFF and use Compression Packets. Set Resolution to 300 pixels/inch and SAVE. You will then have a 300dpi tiff figure. Most journals require 300dpi!
How to change image resolution to 300 DPI using PowerPoint:
First save your file (current slide) as TIFF file in PowerPoint (file>save as> type file name and select save as type TIFF or JPEG>save (Check resolution of image: right click on image icon>Properties>Details>resolution (mostly set at 96 dpi by default))
Change the resolution to 300 dpi:
start menu>type in search engine “regedit”>open file
Double click on “HKEY_CURRENT_USER>software>microsoft>office>14.0 >PowerPoint>option
Create new file in option folder: Right click>new>DWORD(32 bit) value
Rename new created file>”Exportbitmapresolution”
Right click on file>modify>select decimal option and set value data as 300 and press OK
Now again save your file (current slide) as TIFF file in PowerPoint and check resolution(300 dpi)
I found, FastStone Photo Resizer to change image DPI as very useful and it supports all formats of images. The Link to download the tool is: https://www.faststone.org/FSResizerDownload.htm