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Fixx

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Posts posted by Fixx

  1. You are right, it behaves a little weird. You can have a stroke if you convert image to have picture frame, but altering crop after that becomes complicated (actually I could not find a way to alter). So you can crop first and frame and stroke after, but altering/cropping after does not seem to be possible.

    Crop tool does not work on picture frame but the whole element and thus crops stroke away too. Maybe someone has figured this out? Seems quite basic to me... ;)

  2. Check the images.

    Are they 16-bit or 8-bit? CMYK or RGB? 8-bit RGB it should be. 

    Check resolution. Consider if it is unnecessarily high and use downsample feature in export window to take it down.

    Add compression. If all above things are taken care of it is the only tool that can affect filesize (unless you use some more effective compression app for PDF compression - may be too exotic..)

  3. 18 hours ago, MikeTO said:

    With respect, I disagree. You can achieve identical quality for print as long as you know the resolution you're printing at and generate the TIFF images at the right size so that they can be used in Publisher without the need to scale them.

     

    I is just too easy to get Publisher to halftone the image if you use greyscale, RGB or CMYK image. Halftoning will make edges look soft. I have heard it is possible to make Publisher honour sharp edges without halftoning but it looks risky technique. In adobeland using 1-bit TIFF would solve this problem but Publisher does not support 1-bit graphics.

  4. TIFF is not going to give best quality if end product is printed matter. If end product is meant to be used as digital only, it does not matter, TIFF is good as long as resolution is right (we use about 140 dpi in our online products). This assuming the graphics are notations etc black&white graphics. You can shave a few megabytes using greyscale images instead of RGB.

    Normally I would export PDF from music app, open that in Designer and copy paste items to Publisher (if items are smallish). If they are larger (page size) I would check them in Designer and import either as Designer of PDF files o Publisher. It is though known that Affinity has had problems with PDFs produced from certain notation apps.

  5. 3 hours ago, PaulEC said:

    Actually you can draw a new crop area in APhoto. Just start drawing it within the picture. (You can't start outside the picture.) You can adjust the area you've just drawn, if you need to, using its handles and/or rotate the picture.

    OK yes... it is possible. Most of the time I end moving the crop are though, not drawing a new one. I cannot quite pinpoint how to select behaviour.

  6. Crop tool behaves very similarly in PS and AP. Both start with full area (no crop). In PS you can draw a new crop area, in AP you have to adjust he one you have onscreen. PS adjusts view when adjusting crop, AP stays as it is. PS crop is destructive, in AP you can regain cropped pixels by readjusting the crop later.

    I guess there is something else going on if crop tool does not behave as expected.

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