Printing 272 inch x 125 inch @ 72 dpi

Use this calculator to find out how many pixels (resolution) an image should have to be printed at a certain size.

Input Parameters

Dimensions
272 inch x 125 inch
A/R: 2.18
aspect ratio
125 inch x 272 inch
A/R: 0.46
rotated 90°
Printer resolution
Imperial
72 dpi
dots per inch
Metric
28 dots/cm
dots/in ÷ 2.54 cm/in
Printer pitch (dot size)
353 µm
25400 mm/in ÷ dots/in

Print Dimensions

Net (without bleed)
272 inch x 125 inch
34000 inch2
diagonal: 299.35 inch
22.67 feet x 10.42 feet
236 feet2
diagonal: 24.95 feet
7.56 yard x 3.47 yard
26.23 yard2
diagonal: 8.32 yard
6.91 m x 3.18 m
21.97 m2
diagonal: 7.61 m
Total dimensions (with bleed)
276 inch x 129 inch
35604 inch2
diagonal: 304.66 inch
23.01 feet x 10.76 feet
248 feet2
diagonal: 25.4 feet
7.68 yard x 3.59 yard
27.57 yard2
diagonal: 8.48 yard
7.01 m x 3.28 m
22.99 m2
diagonal: 7.74 m

Print Pixel Size

Net dimensions (no bleed)
Pixel dimensions
19584 x 9000 pixels
width x height
Total dimensions (with bleed)
Pixel dimensions
19872 x 9288 pixels
width x height

Common examples

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What DPI should I use for printing?

300 DPI for high-quality prints (photos, brochures). 150 DPI for magazines. 72-96 DPI for large format (billboards, banners) viewed from distance. Newspaper = 72 DPI. The farther the viewing distance, the lower DPI needed.

How do I calculate pixels from print size and DPI?

Pixels = Inches × DPI. For 8×10 inch at 300 DPI: 8×300 = 2400 pixels wide, 10×300 = 3000 pixels tall. For metric: convert mm to inches first (÷25.4), then multiply by DPI.

What is bleed in printing?

Bleed is extra image area beyond the trim line, typically 3mm (0.125 inch). It ensures no white edges after cutting. For an A4 page with bleed, design at 216×303mm instead of 210×297mm. Total pixels increase accordingly.

What is the difference between DPI and PPI?

PPI (pixels per inch) describes screen/image resolution. DPI (dots per inch) describes printer output. A 300 PPI image prints well at 300 DPI. They're often used interchangeably, but technically DPI refers to physical printing dots.