Floyd–Steinberg dithering (1976) is the most widely used error-diffusion method and remains the default choice for many laser engravers. It spreads quantization error to neighbouring pixels in a fixed pattern, producing smooth gradients and a natural, granular look that suits most photographs, portraits, and general-purpose engraving. It is very fast and works well at 254 × 300 DPI on materials from light wood and anodized aluminum to cardboard and paper. If you are unsure which algorithm to pick, start with Floyd–Steinberg; it rarely disappoints.
Descripción
The most popular all-rounder. It creates smooth, natural-looking images by gently spreading dots. Great for almost any photo.
Ideal para
General purpose photography and complex images.
Aspecto visual
Classic granular look; nice balance of detail.
Materiales recomendados
Light Wood, Anodized Aluminum, Cardboard, Paper.
Velocidad de procesamiento
Muy rápido
Consejos profesionales
Works well at 254-300 DPI. May show slight directional artifacts on large flat areas. Best for portraits and landscapes. Avoid on very dark materials where dot clusters might burn through.
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