ons. These can be reset.
Rick S.
-Original Message- From: Hija de la madre patria
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2016 2:51 AM
To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
Subject: [Gimp-user] resolution
When I open an image, the resolution always occurs in 72 dpi but the
real is 300, for example. How can I know the rea
IMAGE > IMAGE PROPERTIES (This will also show you CMYK)
or IMAGE > PRINT SIZE for resolution and dimensions. These can be reset.
Rick S.
-Original Message-
From: Hija de la madre patria
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2016 2:51 AM
To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
Subject: [Gim
When I open an image, the resolution always occurs in 72 dpi but the real is
300, for example. How can I know the real resolution? Also if the image is in
CMYK donĀ“t give me that information
Thanks
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List address:gim
Remember that as a container, pdf's can contain embedded jpg images at
varying pixel densities...
Christians solution would be the better solution I think.
On Tue, Jul 7, 2015 at 4:36 AM Joel Rees wrote:
> 2015/07/07 16:55 "Christian Mandel" :
> >
> > For this use case,
>
> Well, actually, even
2015/07/07 16:55 "Christian Mandel" :
>
> For this use case,
Well, actually, even IM's default 72 px/in would have done my present job.
However,
> I would suggest using the pdfimages program (from xpdf I guess)
> (with the -j option to preserve embedded jpg) to extract the original
images.
this
2015/07/07 16:07 "Pat David" :
>
> The pdf can be exported at any resolution you ask.
> It's the reason you can specify which density you want on import.
For some reason, I was expecting that dialog to offer the actual resolution
of the encapsulated jpeg image as a default. Would be nice to have a
For this use case, I would suggest using the pdfimages program (from
xpdf I guess) (with the -j option to preserve embedded jpg) to extract
the original images. The import in gimp will always "render" the pdf,
what will always scale the original image, unless you hit the exact
resoultion/size.
The pdf can be exported at any resolution you ask. It's the reason you can
specify which density you want on import. (Imagemagick has a couple of
options for handling this:
http://www.imagemagick.org/discourse-server/viewtopic.php?t=8707).
What happens when you set the import density higher in GIM
I have a pdf of scanned images, theoretically jpeg images, and the gimp
will offer me a selection dialog, from which it will import them
individually as 1304x932 at 100 px/in. (This is odd, because I selected
300dpi at scan time, so the images should be 3 times that pixel density.
But, then, 22Mb f
A small clarification.
I do a lot of stuff with A5 pages. At 100 dpi an A5 image will turn out
at at about 825 x 1175 pixels. I find this gives sufficient resolution
for most purposes, looks good when displayed at native size on the
screen, and is the appropriate size to store as a page in an
-user] Resolution
Hi Leon,
1. If you select Image > Scale Image, The Scale image box
opens.
2, Change the Image Size units to something convenient.
3. Note the width.
4. Change the resolution to what you require.
5. Change
ail.com
Numbers may not lie, but neither do they tell the whole truth.
From: leon.white...@ntlworld.com
To: strata_ran...@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] Resolution
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 19:13:59 +
Thanks...but when I change the picture size the resolution
changes..
Hi Barry,
On 14 Dec 12 20:19 Barry Say said:
> The size of the image will remain the same in cm but its size in
> pixels will change. I often do this to publish scans on the
> internet. I regularly scan stuff at 300 dpi and preserve this as a
> record, but I will generally reduce the resoluti
Hi Leon,
1. If you select Image > Scale Image, The Scale image box opens.
2, Change the Image Size units to something convenient.
3. Note the width.
4. Change the resolution to what you require.
5. Change the width back to the original size, the height will follow.
6. Select Scale Image
The size
On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 9:27 PM, wrote:
> Is there a way to change the resolution of a picture without it changing the
> size.
>
> I cannot find a way to separate the two..
Are you looking for Image / Print Size ?
Alexandre Prokoudine
http://libregraphicsworld.org
__
It's under "Image > Print Size...".
-- Stratadrake
strata_ran...@hotmail.com
Numbers may not lie, but neither do they tell the whole truth.
From: leon.white...@ntlworld.com
To: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 17:27:35 +0000
Subject: [Gim
Is there a way to change the resolution of a picture without it changing the
size.
I cannot find a way to separate the two..
Thanks...Leon___
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