I use SnagIt, a dedicated screen capture program. Although I save to .png files, direct saves to EPS and .PDF are supported; I'd pick .PDF before I'd use EPS....
In either case though, SnagIt saving directly to a file is a cheaper, quicker method that doesn't require manual work in Photoshop. Or Photoshop at all, for that matter. SnagIt also includes a FM menu that makes taking the snap and integrating... a snap. Cheers, Art On 1/26/07, Clara Hall <clara.hall at crossmatch.com> wrote: > Hello everyone, > > We have recently adopted a procedure to yield the highest quality images > which includes the following steps: > > 1. Alt-PrintScrn the image into Photoshop > 2. Save the image as a "Photoshop EPS". Make sure "Image > Interpolation" is set. > > This sets a image dictionary key that Adobe PostScript Level 2, Adobe > PostScript 3, Acrobat, and Acrobat Reader use to do very high > > quality image interpolation and/or downsampling appropriate to the > device's actual resolution and technology at the time the image is > viewed or printed. (Distiller passes this key along from PostScript or > EPS in a PostScript stream into the equivalent PDF image key!) > > 3. Import the resultant EPS file into FM. > -- Art Campbell art.campbell at gmail.com "... In my opinion, there's nothing in this world beats a '52 Vincent and a redheaded girl." -- Richard Thompson No disclaimers apply. DoD 358