DPI Explained for Large Prints — What It Reveals About Sports Jersey Shadowboxes Not all images are meant to be printed large. And in sports jersey shadowboxes, that mistake shows immediately. DPI (dots per inch) controls how much detail an image holds when it’s printed. When photos are enlarged for display, low DPI leads to visible quality loss. That shows up as: • Pixelation in faces and details • Blurry edges around subjects • Loss of clarity at viewing distance • Inconsistent quality inside the shadowbox The problem? It often looks fine on your phone. But once it’s printed and framed… the flaws are permanent. At Picture Worth Custom Framing, DPI is matched to the final display size—not guessed. We account for: • Print size relative to viewing distance • Detail preservation for enlarged images • Output medium (photo paper vs canvas) • Visual balance within the shadowbox Because in a jersey display… the image is part of the story. And it needs to look just as strong as the jersey itself.











