If you have a lot of products / images, you can automate the process with a Shopify image compression app. To add to that, based on your screenshots, when I compress files in Photoshop the quality is not as good as in TinyPNG, so my regular workflow is to edit and resize images in Photoshop, always keeping max quality, then upload them to TinyPNG before uploading to Shopify. Saving image small on photoshop Saving image large on photoshopĮnd result, one photo made small on Photoshop, the other made large on Photoshop, then compressed on Tinypng, both are similar file size, but the 2000 px image is much higher quality Compressing the larger file on Tinypng like for image sizing, this saves you file space because images don't need to be excessive in size in relative to the device they're being loaded to. What I'm wondering is if that's a viable solution? Or is there something I'm unaware of, if maybe there is more to a photo than just the file size, hopefully I explained this properly, please refer to the photos I've attached. The second thing I can do is go onto photoshop, save the image as 2000x2000 pixels (large file) then go onto an image compression website, and compress the photo, it shaves off a lot and the end photo is around the same (roughly 200 kbs)īoth images are of similar file size, but one is 800x800 and the other is 2000x2000, and the image quality is much better. On photoshop, the regular thing I do is export an image, and reduce the size to 800x800 pixels, resulting in a small file size, but poor image quality (roughly 200 kbs) I've been trying to balance image quality with file size, and I found a solution, just not sure if there's any issues I'm unaware of. I'm a photographer for a company that operates on Shopify, and apparently on ecommerce, the smaller your image sizes are, the more relevant google will make your products, and images loading faster being better for customers etc.
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