| I agree somewhat with George, but it's simpler for me. Your constraints made it easy---scan the print at 360, work at 360, and print at 360. (I also have an Epson, the shorter 870 variety)
To answer questions specifically:
1. What resolution would you scan a print the same size as the output print?
expected print resolution, 360dpi in case of an Epson n70/n90
2. What resolution would you use on your Photoshop (or other) file?
scan resolution, see above
3. What printing resolution would you use?
appropriate for the printer, 360dpi in case of an Epson---what I scanned at as well
4. Now the big question -- *why* would you choose these resolutions?
Epsons maneuver best at resolutions that divide evenly into their max resolution. The 870/1270 are 1440dpi max resolution printers, so 360 and 240 work best. I prefer the extra info 360 gives.
5. Have you made comparisons using different resolution files?
I have printed 360dpi, 720dpi, and 1200dpi on the Epson, but only at 4x6---I just got the printer four days ago, and bought larger paper yesterday. The biggest change in quality has been paper type (AVOID Mead paper at all costs, it doesn't absorb Epson's black ink at all). I could not discern a difference in print quality among those listed above. Haven't tried at 240, but I'll burn some paper later and see how it looks.
(I should note that in reality I would scan an archival print at or near maximum scanner resolution, retouch it, archive it, and then scale down for the print, but you knew that already) |