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Please see attached images...

This is an ongoing problem for me...

When I place or copy/paste an image into Affinity Photo, the image resolution is decreased.  As you see in the one image (that I opened), the resolution is 3000x2500...when I put the same image into an existing document, it reduces the resolution.

Shouldn't the image I place into an existing document retain its high resolution?

Help appreciated.

2021-10-20 (2).png

2021-10-20 (3).png

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Since I can’t see which layer in your second image is selected (if any) it’s a little difficult to know what’s happened but the 3000x2500 dimensions shown in your first image are the dimensions of the image itself and the 2050x780 dimensions shown in your second image look like the dimensions of the document into which you have placed the original image, rather than the placed image layer.
Try selecting the placed image layer and then look at the dimensions shown for that.

Note: The ‘whites’ of the image of the woman look ‘washed out’ and ‘rough’ to me. Did you do any processing to it – adding a filter or something – after placing the image in your document?

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1 hour ago, GarryP said:

Since I can’t see which layer in your second image is selected (if any) it’s a little difficult to know what’s happened but the 3000x2500 dimensions shown in your first image are the dimensions of the image itself and the 2050x780 dimensions shown in your second image look like the dimensions of the document into which you have placed the original image, rather than the placed image layer.
Try selecting the placed image layer and then look at the dimensions shown for that.

Note: The ‘whites’ of the image of the woman look ‘washed out’ and ‘rough’ to me. Did you do any processing to it – adding a filter or something – after placing the image in your document?

Not sure how to explain any differently but here goes...

This is a 3D Render...  I've done no processing to it.  I can only surmise that the "washed out" you are seeing is the low resolution. There IS a grunge texture overlay in the banner pic.

In the banner pic you can see that the 3D Render is highlighted.  I've taken 2 screenshots...hopefully this helps.  Resolution is 2050x780.  The render was file>placed into the banner document.

3rd image is of the 3D Render file>opened.  Resolution is 3000x2500.  It's clear to see the difference in image quality from the other two images.

4th image is from the banner document (the 3D Render from the banner placed in a new document)...the 3D Render copy>file>new from clipboard.  Resolution is 532x443.

2021-10-21 (4).png

2021-10-21 (5).png

2021-10-21 (6).png

2021-10-21 (7).png

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  • Staff

Hi @Nita Reed,

There are a few things at play here -

  1. Your image is placed at '18%' of it's full resolution, which can be seen on the context toolbar -

    image.png

    This means the image is actually (roughly) 540 x 450px on your canvas, which is why the quality looks significantly reduced compared to the full size image.
     
  2. When copying this image and using File > New From Clipboard, it will be pasted using the above scaling, hence the size of the document created in your screenshot.
     
  3. File > New From Clipboard in Affinity always uses 72 DPI (this is logged with our developers as an Improvement), so not only will the lower physical resolution be used in the new document, it may also have a lower DPI.

I hope this clears things up :) 

Please Note: I am now out of the office until Tuesday 2nd April on annual leave.

If you require urgent assistance, please create a new thread and a member of our team will be sure to assist asap.

Many thanks :)

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12 minutes ago, Dan C said:

Hi @Nita Reed,

There are a few things at play here -

  1. Your image is placed at '18%' of it's full resolution, which can be seen on the context toolbar -

    image.png

    This means the image is actually (roughly) 540 x 450px on your canvas, which is why the quality looks significantly reduced compared to the full size image.
     
  2. When copying this image and using File > New From Clipboard, it will be pasted using the above scaling, hence the size of the document created in your screenshot.
     
  3. File > New From Clipboard in Affinity always uses 72 DPI (this is logged with our developers as an Improvement), so not only will the lower physical resolution be used in the new document, it may also have a lower DPI.

I hope this clears things up :) 

Thank you for the information.  I'll need to process this to figure out how I feel about it all.

There are two things I come away with lately...  I'm always told, "oh, you're not using photoshop" and if you want to have smaller images (such as in a banner or flyer), it's not actually best to have a higher resolution item.

Keeping my head straight about what I'm looking at (resolution, etc) and WHERE is a bit difficult...

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16 hours ago, Nita Reed said:

Shouldn't the image I place into an existing document retain its high resolution?

It depends on how you place it (and whether you place an "image" image or a "pixel" image).

Here the source from a 300dpi document is saved on disk as a PNG image, resulting in 2016 x 1962px size bitmap.

Then this file is placed in a 72dpi and 300dpi Affinity Photo A4-size documents, showing that the pixel dimension is retained (the image just looks much bigger in the low resolution 72dpi document).

Additionally, the same image is also copied via Clipboard from the source document (where it is 300dpi and has 2016 x 1962px when rasterized to a pixel layer) to the destination documents, and here it can be seen that Affinity apps resize (by design) the image placed on the Clipboard according to the DPI of the destination document. So when pasting the same image to a 300dpi document, the pixel dimension is retained, but when to a 72dpi image, this results in reduced size of 484 x 471px.

300dpidoc.jpg.7772d006b60f02fdd684e73cc16cde2b.jpg

72dpidoc.jpg.23c388a3cedf941b61d805e8ecd216e4.jpg

When copy pasting via Clipboard across Affinity apps, whether the resizing happens depends on whether an image or pixel layer is copied. If a rasterized layer is converted in Publisher to an image object, the source DPI is retained in image meta data, and the original pixel dimensions would be retained, even when pasting to a document with different document DPI. In this case this would result in having the same size of image pasted in a 72dpi document as the image file placed by using File > Place.

UPDATE: I might have unnecessarily complicated the problem by showing behavior that might not be part of your specific problem, but since you appear to have experienced at least apparent reduction of resolution (understood as loss of details in the image), what I described above might be relevant. But I forgot the situation where the destination document has pixels as document unit (like you have in your screenshots): then placed and pasted raster images should directly be rendered using their pixel dimensions and complexities related to conflicts between document resolutions (DPI) have no effect. But as document unit can be changed simply by changing ruler units, this may easily happen inadvertently, and change of unit from pixel based to physical dimension based (like inches or millimeters), or vice versa, will change the way image data (including vector objects) will be exchanged and dimensioned when pasting between different apps (including Affinity apps themselves).

 

 

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58 minutes ago, Lagarto said:

It depends on how you place it (and whether you place an "image" image or a "pixel" image).

Here the source from a 300dpi document is saved on disk as a PNG image, resulting in 2016 x 1962px size bitmap.

Then this file is placed in a 72dpi and 300dpi Affinity Photo A4-size documents, showing that the pixel dimension is retained (the image just looks much bigger in the low resolution 72dpi document).

Additionally, the same image is also copied via Clipboard from the source document (where it is 300dpi and has 2016 x 1962px when rasterized to a pixel layer) to the destination documents, and here it can be seen that Affinity apps resize (by design) the image placed on the Clipboard according to the DPI of the destination document. So when pasting the same image to a 300dpi document, the pixel dimensions are retained, but when to a 72dpi image, this resuls in reduced size of 484x 471px.

300dpidoc.jpg.7772d006b60f02fdd684e73cc16cde2b.jpg

72dpidoc.jpg.23c388a3cedf941b61d805e8ecd216e4.jpg

When copy pasting via Clipboard across Affinity apps, whether the resizing happens depends on whether an image or pixel layer is copied. If a rasterized layer is converted in Publisher to an image object, the source DPI is retained in image meta data, and the original pixel dimensions would be retained, even when pasting to a document with different document DPI. In this case this would result in having the same size of image pasted in a 72dpi document as the image file placed by using File > Place.

 

 

 

This sounded plausible...not sure I've got it right, though.

1018219499_2021-10-21(8).thumb.png.427b68485d3a5b475ebd3dcd163289ca.pngIn the attached screenshot, I placed the rasterized 3D Render into the banner doc.  Did the same as before...assumed the resolution of the document it was placed in.

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5 minutes ago, GarryP said:

I believe the Pan (View) Tool – which you are using in your latest screenshot – always shows you the document dimensions.
You need to select the Pixel Layer - with the Move Tool, for example - to see the dimensions and DPI of that layer.

Where is that information?1553788604_2021-10-21(9).thumb.png.9c214d5f4c3959cb96eb7cbcc1416d45.png

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4 minutes ago, Nita Reed said:

Where is that information?

Which layer do you want the resolution for?

If you want it for the document, then use Document > Resize Document and you'll see the size and the resolution. If you want it for the Placed Image layer, use the Move Tool and look in the Context Toolbar, as shown above.

-- Walt
Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases
PC:
    Desktop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 

    Laptop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU.
iPad:  iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 17.4.1, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard 
Mac:  2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sonoma 14.4.1

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2 hours ago, Nita Reed said:

In the attached screenshot, I placed the rasterized 3D Render into the banner doc.  Did the same as before...assumed the resolution of the document it was placed in.

It can be seen from the screenshot that you have 2050 x 780px in the document where you paste the image in focus, so in this context the placed image would have around 500 px width when the document is flattened no matter how it is placed (via Clipboard or File > Place). Affinity Photo shows any raster element using the document DPI so even if a hires image is reduced in size and has a high PPI value, it would look pixelated when zoomed in close (e.g. if an image that has a 1500 px width would need to be shown in 1 in width in a document that can show only 72px per inch).

If it is an image layer that you have, you can see the PPI value on the context toolbar while you have the layer selected (with the Move tool), but if it s pixel layer, you cannot would see it grayed out but could not directly edit the value. PPI value would tell whether you can afford enlarging an image considering the document PPI value. 

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35 minutes ago, Lagarto said:

It can be seen from the screenshot that you have 2050 x 780px in the document where you paste the image in focus, so in this context the placed image would have around 500 px width when the document is flattened no matter how it is placed (via Clipboard or File > Place). Affinity Photo shows any raster element using the document DPI so even if a hires image is reduced in size and has a high PPI value, it would look pixelated when zoomed in close (e.g. if an image that has a 1500 px width would need to be shown in 1 in width in a document that can show only 72px per inch).

If it is an image layer that you have, you can see the PPI value on the context toolbar while you have the layer selected (with the Move tool), but if it s pixel layer, you cannot. PPI value would tell whether you can afford enlarging an image considering the document PPI value. 

So I was looking at the correct information before? 

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54 minutes ago, walt.farrell said:

Which layer do you want the resolution for?

If you want it for the document, then use Document > Resize Document and you'll see the size and the resolution. If you want it for the Placed Image layer, use the Move Tool and look in the Context Toolbar, as shown above.

WHERE IN THE CONTEXT TOOLBAR?  I DON'T SEE ANYTHING BUT DPI?

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1 hour ago, Nita Reed said:

Where is that information?

816027676_ScreenShot2021-10-21at7_48_33AM.png.82a970a1f0de7284dd6d15651296c0e9.png

3 minutes ago, Nita Reed said:

WHERE IN THE CONTEXT TOOLBAR?  I DON'T SEE ANYTHING BUT DPI?

DPI is PPI or Resolution.

If you want the overall size in pixels then look at the Transform panel when the layer is selected with the Move tool.

Mac Pro (Late 2013) Mac OS 12.7.4 
Affinity Designer 2.4.0 | Affinity Photo 2.4.0 | Affinity Publisher 2.4.0 | Beta versions as they appear.

I have never mastered color management, period, so I cannot help with that.

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1 hour ago, Nita Reed said:

I was looking for the pixels...not DPI.

If you select the Placed Image layer, then the Context Toolbar will have both the DPI and the pixel dimensions when you use the Move Tool.  

For that Background layer, look at the document info in Resize Document.

-- Walt
Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases
PC:
    Desktop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 

    Laptop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU.
iPad:  iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 17.4.1, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard 
Mac:  2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sonoma 14.4.1

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Alternatively: For the background layer/document, select the Move Tool and the Background layer, and the Context Toolbar will give you the DPI. Switch to the View Tool (Hand) and the Context Toolbar will give you the pixel dimensions.

 

-- Walt
Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases
PC:
    Desktop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 

    Laptop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU.
iPad:  iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 17.4.1, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard 
Mac:  2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sonoma 14.4.1

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@Nita Reed

Try this - perhaps it will improve the end result.

1) Use "Place" as you have been to bring your external image (the Source image at the source resolution) into your banner layout (the Destination image at the destination resolution) and set its position and size within the banner's composition.

2) Once that is set, note the percentage reduction (i.e., the percentage of the original, full-sized image) that the context toolbar is displaying for your placed image.  In your screenshot, this data reads "3000x2500 pixels @ 541 dpi (18%)" - so note that the working image size that you ultimately want from your full-res image is 18% of the original.  This data will be displayed when you select the Placed image layer with the MOVE TOOL active.

3) Open the original artwork and resize the document to 18% of the original size.  AP makes this easy - you can enter "18%" into the width or height field in the Resize Document dialog box.  ALSO - choose a more accurate resampling algorithm, like Lanczos 3, or a smoother algorithm, like bicubic.  Experiment to see what works best for your images.  Now export this resized image as a PNG or whatever - name it something useful like <imagename>_18.PNG or whatever.

4) Back in the banner document, WITH THE MOVE TOOL ACTIVE click on the low-quality image you placed there originally and click on the "Replace image" button in the context toolbar.  Navigate to the newly resized image you created in Step 3 and select it.  If the MOVE tool is not active when you do this, the Placed image data and the accompanying Replace image button will not appear in the context tool bar.

Note the increase in image quality compared to the image you placed in Step 1.

***

A couple of things are happening here, but the major culprit is that the Place operation appears to use Bilinear interpolation to resample the source artwork to its new size and resolution within the destination document.  This may be sufficient to work with a large Placed source document for proxy purposes, but it is not acceptable for the final render.  In Step 3 of the above process, you resized the source image using a better interpolation algorithm and got better quality results when inserting the resized image into the destination document, using the Replace image button.  Also, because your artwork is CG, the edges are somewhat inartfully anti-aliased (versus a more subtle digital photograph, for example) and this gets amplified by the bilinear interpolation.

So, try resampling your 3000x2500 pixel 3D render of the person in the skeleton costume to 18% of its original size by opening it within AP and choosing Document > Resize Document - enter "18%" into the width field and choose "Lanczos 3 (non-separable)" or "Bicubic" for example - export this as a PNG.  Then go to your banner document, click on the low-quality artwork of the character and hit the "Replace image" button and swap in the new, resized image.  Using the Replace image command is a convenience because you can swap in the high-quality resized/resampled artwork without disturbing the layout (in the layer stack, for example) and positioning of the proxy artwork in your composition.

Attached is a screenshot I contrived to demonstrate the results of the above process.  The Destination document (analogous to your banner doc) is a 2048 x 2048 pixel image at 72 dpi (a photograph of a bicycle).  The two inset images of the camera on the desk are from a 47Mpx camera that makes a JPEG image over 8000 pixels wide.  To make things similar to your image data, I resampled the 8000 pixel wide image of the camera down to 3000 pixels wide @ 300 dpi as a starting point.  Then I placed that 3000 px wide image as the Source Image into my 72 dpi Destination document of the bicycle image and dragged the corner of the Placed image frame to scale it to 18% of its original size, as displayed in the context toolbar.  Then I went back to the 3000 pixel wide original and resized it to 18% using Lanczos 3 (non-separable) resampling and exported that image as a PNG.  I then Placed that Source image into the Destination document at 100%.  I then took a screenshot of the part of the document that contains the two placed images, viewing the document at 100% zoom.  The difference in quality is obvious (make sure to view it at full size).

I have attached the AP file with the comparison placed images in it, as well as the original 3000 pixel wide image of the camera on the desk so you can follow along and do the experiment yourself.

TL/DR version - AP should implement a choice of resizing algorithms for the Place operation.  Or a "rasterize" option for the Place operation that permits the choice of resampling algorithm.

Hope this helps - LOL.

Kirk

 

 

placetest.jpg

source3000.png

PlaceTest.afphoto

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On 10/22/2021 at 1:26 AM, kirkt said:

@Nita Reed

Try this - perhaps it will improve the end result.

1) Use "Place" as you have been to bring your external image (the Source image at the source resolution) into your banner layout (the Destination image at the destination resolution) and set its position and size within the banner's composition.

2) Once that is set, note the percentage reduction (i.e., the percentage of the original, full-sized image) that the context toolbar is displaying for your placed image.  In your screenshot, this data reads "3000x2500 pixels @ 541 dpi (18%)" - so note that the working image size that you ultimately want from your full-res image is 18% of the original.  This data will be displayed when you select the Placed image layer with the MOVE TOOL active.

3) Open the original artwork and resize the document to 18% of the original size.  AP makes this easy - you can enter "18%" into the width or height field in the Resize Document dialog box.  ALSO - choose a more accurate resampling algorithm, like Lanczos 3, or a smoother algorithm, like bicubic.  Experiment to see what works best for your images.  Now export this resized image as a PNG or whatever - name it something useful like <imagename>_18.PNG or whatever.

4) Back in the banner document, WITH THE MOVE TOOL ACTIVE click on the low-quality image you placed there originally and click on the "Replace image" button in the context toolbar.  Navigate to the newly resized image you created in Step 3 and select it.  If the MOVE tool is not active when you do this, the Placed image data and the accompanying Replace image button will not appear in the context tool bar.

Note the increase in image quality compared to the image you placed in Step 1.

***

A couple of things are happening here, but the major culprit is that the Place operation appears to use Bilinear interpolation to resample the source artwork to its new size and resolution within the destination document.  This may be sufficient to work with a large Placed source document for proxy purposes, but it is not acceptable for the final render.  In Step 3 of the above process, you resized the source image using a better interpolation algorithm and got better quality results when inserting the resized image into the destination document, using the Replace image button.  Also, because your artwork is CG, the edges are somewhat inartfully anti-aliased (versus a more subtle digital photograph, for example) and this gets amplified by the bilinear interpolation.

So, try resampling your 3000x2500 pixel 3D render of the person in the skeleton costume to 18% of its original size by opening it within AP and choosing Document > Resize Document - enter "18%" into the width field and choose "Lanczos 3 (non-separable)" or "Bicubic" for example - export this as a PNG.  Then go to your banner document, click on the low-quality artwork of the character and hit the "Replace image" button and swap in the new, resized image.  Using the Replace image command is a convenience because you can swap in the high-quality resized/resampled artwork without disturbing the layout (in the layer stack, for example) and positioning of the proxy artwork in your composition.

Attached is a screenshot I contrived to demonstrate the results of the above process.  The Destination document (analogous to your banner doc) is a 2048 x 2048 pixel image at 72 dpi (a photograph of a bicycle).  The two inset images of the camera on the desk are from a 47Mpx camera that makes a JPEG image over 8000 pixels wide.  To make things similar to your image data, I resampled the 8000 pixel wide image of the camera down to 3000 pixels wide @ 300 dpi as a starting point.  Then I placed that 3000 px wide image as the Source Image into my 72 dpi Destination document of the bicycle image and dragged the corner of the Placed image frame to scale it to 18% of its original size, as displayed in the context toolbar.  Then I went back to the 3000 pixel wide original and resized it to 18% using Lanczos 3 (non-separable) resampling and exported that image as a PNG.  I then Placed that Source image into the Destination document at 100%.  I then took a screenshot of the part of the document that contains the two placed images, viewing the document at 100% zoom.  The difference in quality is obvious (make sure to view it at full size).

I have attached the AP file with the comparison placed images in it, as well as the original 3000 pixel wide image of the camera on the desk so you can follow along and do the experiment yourself.

TL/DR version - AP should implement a choice of resizing algorithms for the Place operation.  Or a "rasterize" option for the Place operation that permits the choice of resampling algorithm.

Hope this helps - LOL.

Kirk

 

 

placetest.jpg

source3000.png

PlaceTest.afphoto

Wow...that was AWESOME!  What a great solution...

THANK YOU!

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  • 3 months later...

Hello

I have tried posting my enquiry in another, similar thread, with no response yet, so let's try here, as there is a significant overlap between my question and the above discussion.  I would be grateful for help.

I am trying to make the transition from Photoshop to Affinity Photo and for developing raw images I find Affinity Photo more powerful than the raw file converter, but I have a problem with resolution.

Amongst other cameras, I use a Fujifilm GFX 50S and when I convert the raw images with the free software RAW FILE CONVERTER EX 3.0 powered by SILKYPIX, I get images with a resolution of 300 DPI, but when I convert them in Affinity Photo Develop Persona, the result has just 72 DPI (even though when I open the file in Photoshop I find that it is 16 bit!).

There must be an Affinity Photo default setting that is wrong, but I can't see where to change it.

I know how to change the resolution manually, one image at a time, in Affinity Photo, after the image has been developed, but cutting the resolution from the 300 dpi in the camera down to 72 dpi and then changing it back up to 300 dpi must result in loss of definition.

Guidance on how to solve this would be greatly appreciated!

Trevor

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27 minutes ago, Trevor A said:

There must be an Affinity Photo default setting that is wrong, but I can't see where to change it.

I don't think there is.

Can you supply one of your raw images?

-- Walt
Designer, Photo, and Publisher V1 and V2 at latest retail and beta releases
PC:
    Desktop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 64GB memory, AMD Ryzen 9 5900 12-Core @ 3.00 GHz, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 

    Laptop:  Windows 11 Pro, version 23H2, 32GB memory, Intel Core i7-10750H @ 2.60GHz, Intel UHD Graphics Comet Lake GT2 and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 Laptop GPU.
iPad:  iPad Pro M1, 12.9": iPadOS 17.4.1, Apple Pencil 2, Magic Keyboard 
Mac:  2023 M2 MacBook Air 15", 16GB memory, macOS Sonoma 14.4.1

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