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Recently when I open a file into photoshop to compress it, the file says the file size is much bigger then the actual size shown in file properties. So after compression it is bigger than it started!
For example I have 88kb jpeg that opens in Photoshop as 1.17 MB. Save for web brings the size to 105kb!
Are there settings etc that is causing this? How can I have Photoshop open the file to reflect the size given in file properties?
Are you sure that the 1.17Mb info is not the uncompressed data size (what dimensions is you jpeg)?
For the 105Kb output you have settings (compression level, progressive etc..) you can adjust. You may also want to strip IPTC and XMP data if any
Edit about resolution :
The resolution info (DPI dot per pixel or any other unit) is an indication on the print size. It only says how much pixel of the image it will take to make a printable inch. It s only an information stored in the image header (2 in fact horizontal and vertical resolutions).
The misunderstandaing about resolution is caused by PS using this info for resize operation.
Want to do with that?. while the image is the same no matter. checks the pixels, width and height are the same as the original.
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Microsoft recently added SVG support to Word 2016. But when trying to save a document containing a SVG vector graphic as PDF the graphic will be converted to a raster image.
I tried to change the Image Size and Quality Options (-> "do not compress images in file" and "high fidelity") but this had no effect whats-o-ever.
My second approach was to use the "Microsoft Print to PDF"-printer but this didn't preserve the graphics either.
Is there a way to preserve the scalability of my graphics when saving to document as pdf? Is there somewhere an option in the settings that I haven't discovered yet?
If this is only a SVG issue: Which other vector graphics format will work better?
In response to your final question:
"If this is only a SVG issue: Which other vector graphics format will work better?"
For years the only vector format that Word supported was Microsoft's proprietary .emf file format. If you encounter further issues, you can always try converting your .svg to .emf. Inkscape can export as .emf, and in my experience it's a much more accurate conversion than Adobe Illustrator.
Incidentally, the workaround that Andrew posted above works by converting your clipboard data into an .emf file. However there are a few times when exporting from Inkscape directly would be preferable, for instance when you want to preserve a buffer of blank space around your graphic (using the clipboard will not select blank space).
Microsoft seems to have improved SVG support in Word. SVG vector graphics are now perfectly preserved when saving the document as PDF.
(I'm using Office version 1806)
I have Adobe Acrobat X Pro 10.1.16.13 installed, which gives me a Save as PDF file option in Word 2016 that does put the SVG graphic into the PDF file as a vector graphic.
I user Insert|Picture to get the SVG graphic files into word.
A 70K SVG file, for example, slows down the editing in Word significantly, so I put placeholder JPG or PNG graphics in the Word file until the final draft, then I replace them with SVG files as the last step before saving as PDF.
Ran into this issue today also. SVG seems to be broken in Word. One way I have found to preserve the scalability of graphics in PDF output from Word is:
Open the SVG in Inkscape
Select all and Copy to Clipboard
Using Paste Special in Word (Alt+E,S) paste it into the document as a "Picture (Enhanced Metafile)"
I believe this also works in previous versions of Word at least as far back as 2013 and 2010.
I just solved the problem by doing export directly from OneDrive online. Probably it happens because online word version is html-based and it has better treatment for svg.
I solved this yesterday and hope the answer works for you.
The graphic was cropped at first in your Word (my version is 2019)? In my case, if I insert the SVG graphics without cropping, the SVG graphic works well in PDF. While if the SVG graphic was cropped before converting to the PDF, it will collapse. It has nothing to do with the resolution.
Besides, my SVG graphics were generated by Python. If you need to crop the images to adjust the size, "Inksacpe" software is a good choice.
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I am having an issue with Photoshop where the project shows in different colors than the project in save for web preview and explorer. I like the color of it in browser but I want Photoshop to show the same!
I have looked everywhere and tried to do it how they say but there is still no fix.
EDIT:
The color on the project border is #272425 As you can see here, Photoshop is not showing it correctly..
http://www.color-hex.com/color/272425
EDIT 2:
I was messing with the "Save for web" and changed Preview to "Legacy Macintosh(No Color Management) and the preview matched the project in the canvas. Here is a screenshot of it.
i had the same issue, try this :
open a new file and check the color mode at the beginning. then open up your file again!
When you save a file it gives you various colour management profiles depending on your set up (or needs). If you save without any colour management profile then the colours will be true
May be you are using CMYK color mode. try to change it. go to image then mode and click RGB color. RGB use for displaying purpose while CMYK Mode use for Printing purpose. Since this is web site item design, select RGB Color mode.
The export for web uses sRGB. You use US Web Coated. Change your document to RGB mode and sRGB profile.
The sRGB color is the smallest RGB color space.
You typically always work in the smallest space, even if your screen allows a wider RGB.
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I am trying to output multiple images in Blender at a time.
I have a scene and for example two cameras. I want to use two "file output" node in the node editor to do that. But it only outputs one image at a time. The other "file output" node will never work. And I can't find anywhere to change the name of the output images either.
Is it the limit of blender, or is there any way to do these? Thanks!
Aaron
To render multiple cameras at once, you'll need to do a little bit of prep.
Duplicate your scene, linking objects. In the new scene, set your 2nd camera as active (Ctrl+Num0 while 2nd cam is selected).
In composite node editor, use 2 render layers, one for each scene. Select your File Output node and press 'n' to reveal the properties panel if not open already. Under Active Node in properties panel, click 'Add Input.' (In that same area you can name the output files as you wish.)
Link the 2 render layers w/ appropriate scenes to the 2 inputs on the File Output node.
You may need to remove any Render Layers from original scene, I'm not sure. Here's a sample:
https://dl.dropbox.com/s/b76qaxdo89tnhyb/2013-04-02%2019_59_49-Blender.png
And what it outputs:
https://dl.dropbox.com/s/597evwmdyynhu0z/2013-04-02%2020_00_10-MEDIA%20%28M_%29.png
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I want to draw watermark image beneath existing PDF text content. Currently i can able to draw image above existing content using core graphics.
I found solution for my own problem. I have solved the problem by changing the order of drawing in the target context.
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I created a pdf in Latex. All is well, except that I want to have the generated pdf to open at 100% zoom level by default when opened in adobe pdf reader. Currently, it is being displayed at 57%. I have also noticed other instances of pdf generated by my other Latex code being displayed at zoom levels other than 100%.
Is this just an issue with viewer or does this deviation from 100% zoom has to do something with Latex code in itself. I mean, if you change the page borders or something (or that the document type is article and not book or something else); does that effect the default zoom?
I do not remember LaTeX defaults, but for sure you can control zoom level using the hyperref package if you are not already doing so. Direct link to manual: here
\usepackage{hyperref}
\hypersetup{pdfstartview={XYZ null null 1.00}}
Please note I do not have Acrobat Reader installed on the machine I'm writing these, so don't hesitate to report if somethings wrong. Also, assuming compilation with pdflatex.
Start your code in this way if you want to compile your text either with pdflatex or latex.
Adequate it to your needs.
\RequirePackage{ifpdf}
\ifpdf
\documentclass[pdftex,letterpaper,12pt]{article}
\usepackage{lmodern}
% \usepackage{textcomp}
\else
\documentclass[dvips,letterpaper,12pt]{article}
% \usepackage[active]{srcltx} % for dvi viewers supporting source code mapping
\fi
But you may want to set the default zoom size in your viewer preferences option.
Evince viewer allows to configure the buttons of the top bar, add the scaling buttons.
You have to use the \usepackage[pdflatex]{hyperref} package, compile with pdflatex (or rubber -d) and use the hypersetup setting I put in a comment above.