Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
- From: "DavidF" <Nope@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2007 12:41:44 -0800
This will take a while to answer...I'll be back.
DavidF
"The Kat" <TheKat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1D55872F-9154-4037-BCB4-86271144786A@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Now YOU lost ME. I just did a "save as" of the optimized file because I
was
unsure what would happen if I re-optimized the files after I added new
pictures. At least I can uncheck the allow PNG before any more of them
breed
in my program. The site uses LOTS of photos - stained glass, fused glass,
jewelry,... and each piece is unique.
I will have to oupdate the files frequently as new pieces are created and
new jewelry styles come out. Will it be best to replace the entire page
and
load that up instead of trying to place each new photo into the niche of
the
old one?
Should I presume the larger files will be the 400 pixel ones (sorry - NOT
dpi, I meant pixels!). I use Photoshop for the image fixes and crops. The
ones in the site now are at 100 DPI so the 400 "DPI" of which I spoke was
400
pixels across = 4" on my resize. Is this a reasonable size for the "big"
shots? How do I link the little PUB thumbnails to the larger files? And
WHEN?
Before I save as HTML and move that to the site or after the site is up?
That's where you lost me - you say "publish to the web" and I don't have a
clue how to do that! I was planning to load HTML files that PUB creates
each
time I save.
Lost in space,
The Kat
"DavidF" wrote:
Pub 2003 makes copies of any inserted images in various formats including
PNGs. I don't remember if you have already done this, but if not, go to
Tools > Options > Web Tab and uncheck "Rely on VML..." and "Allow
PNGs...".
This will minimize the use of PNGs, but not eliminate their production.
Just
ignore them.
Secondly, unless I am reading your post wrong, you do not want to do a
Save
As to produce your html output. Do a Publish to the Web, and you will get
filtered html.
400 dpi images are for print documents. It is good that you are using the
graphics compression tool in Publisher but if you want the optimal images
in
your pages, then you will resize and optimize the images before they are
inserted into the page. And if you are going to link to "full size"
images,
they have to be optimized and sized in a third party program. There are
lots
of them out there, but a freebie that works pretty well is
www.irfanview.com
.. Download and install it, and then open your original images and resize
them to the 400 or 480 pixel width, at 72 or 96 dpi and perhaps 30%
compression...play with it to see what final quality and size is
acceptable
to you. If you want to optimize the images that you insert, just resize
the
original to the custom size you created on your Publisher page, insert
them,
and then make sure they are at 100% scale. (Select the image > Format >
Picture > Size tab). This is likely to give you the best picture when
viewed.
DavidF
"The Kat" <TheKat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:B1B67A6A-EAAD-4FC0-9D6B-C96DF20BFF8F@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Most of my "small" files are 400 dpi. I optimized the pages and did a
save
as
(still need to add photos). I looked at the page image files (Not the
ones
I
pasted) and the sizes were down considerably ... except for the PNGs.
Does
this mean I should upload the ~400 dpi original files for my expanded
files.
Any way to edit the PNGs to make them smaller? That's a new format to
me
and
it crept onto the pages with some of the Office graphics files. They
are
real
space hogs!
"DavidF" wrote:
Reference: How to Thumbnail in Publisher 2003 Web Publications:
http://pubs.logicalexpressions.com/Pub0009/LPMArticle.asp?ID=564
Size? Its a trade off. The bigger the picture, the larger the file,
the
slower it loads. Start thinking in pixels instead of inches. I
generally
use
a 400 pixel width for most "full size" views, and occasionally 480.
This
gets the file sizes down to no more than 15 to 20 kb, which load
pretty
fast. Some people will provide two links...one for dial-up users to
smaller
images, and another for broadband users where file size isn't so
important,
and then link these to larger pictures.
DavidF
"The Kat" <TheKat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:C882998C-72C4-450B-A382-2F74FAB26C51@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I would like to link to expanded pictures as well.
What ia the best resolution and photo size (3x5, 4x6 ...) to use for
the
expanded pictures? I resized all my product thumbnails to 100 dpi
and
a
small size before I stuck them into my Pub 2003 site. (at least I
still
have
the master photos at 300 dpi).
How much does the "outside" photo link impact the loading time of
the
site
page? Does the hyperlink slow down the load?
"Don Schmidt" wrote:
While in Publisher, right click the thumbnail, select hyperlink and
then
enter
/filename.jpg or if it is a gif or if it is a bmp. Upload the file
picture
along with the new website files.
--
Don
Vancouver, USA
"Sky 1962" <Sky 1962@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:B6780038-74BC-4764-A1E0-D48E32127A0E@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I have resized my original pic to a thumbnail and added it to myNow
website.
I would like it if I click on that thumbnail it would hyperlink
to
my
original pic. What are the necessary steps. I'm running on
Publisher
2003.
.
- References:
- Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
- From: DavidF
- Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
- From: The Kat
- Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
- From: DavidF
- Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
- From: The Kat
- Re: How can I hyperlink to an enlarged picture in Publisher 2003?
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