Re: Insert image does not retain Image quality



On Mar 27, 6:34 pm, "macropod" <inva...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hilivetohike,

I can't point you to anything specific, but I imagine what you're seeing is the aliasing & moiré effects you can get with on-screen
images in any graphics display program where the the image is being scaled to a size that can't easily be aligned with the screen
pixels. You can probably minimise this by examining the original image's dimensions and scaling it in Word to a size that gives an
exact multiple of image pixels to screen pixels. Even after doing that, though, viewing the document with a different scaling or on
other monitors with different resolutions is liable to reintroduce the same aliasing & moiré issues.

Cheers
--
macropod
[MVP - Microsoft Word]
-------------------------

"livetohike" <moorma...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in messagenews:b9e8d61a-d8c0-48a9-a67f-ab63013c7bdd@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
On Mar 26, 6:32 pm, "macropod" <inva...@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hilivetohike,

The difference in appearance is probably due to a mismatch between the image dimensions and the scaling used to show it in Word.
Unless it's for on-screen use only, what really matters is whether the printed output is of sufficient quality.

Cheers
--
macropod
[MVP - Microsoft Word]
-------------------------

"livetohike" <moorma...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in messagenews:bfa7b3c8-a9cb-40d8-9813-77b027caf347@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hello,
I have tried inserting a jpg, gif, and bmp into a Word doc (via Insert/
Image) and they all look worse than the original when viewed side by
side on my monitor.

Anything I can do about this?

What format does Word use to store inserted images?

Thanks

This is mostly for on-screen.
Can you point me to something that explains how Word scales/handles
pasting images?

I played w/ it for an hour by copying images from various sources and
pasting them into Word as pictures, but saw no rhyme or reason to how
it works.

Thanks

Thanks, not sure I get all that. Seems like the same graphic on the
same monitor should display identically, but I think what you are
saying is that the application doing the displaying can have an affect
as well even if the graphic stored within the documents is bit for bit
identical.

I still don't understand when you say Word 'scales' the image. Why
does it scale it? Seems like it should maintain the original size.

I pasted a small gif from Photoshop to Word and then back again (from
Word to Photo) and the image definitely changed, so I still think Word
is changing the image itself, not just the way it displays it.

.



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