Forum Moderators: not2easy
The trick then is to balance an acceptable level of image quality (few or no artifacts visible to the human eye) against an acceptable file size (whatever you determine is appropriate for your audience).
The compression is commonly set when you Save As (also in Photoshop when you Save for Web) as a range from 0-100%; kk2k is recommending 40-60% compression.
GIFs for graphic images such as logo's and those with large areas of flat colour. Good if you are converting vector based graphics.
JPEG for images contain a lot of variation in tone colour composition contract and fine deatils such as photo's.
There are many more types of graphic file types, such as TIFFs or PSD files, but apart from Bitmaps and PNG's, browsers will not support them. Including native files from Paintshop Pro (not sure of the file type - never used them myself)
Ta
Limbo