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Everything posted by h_d
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You don't say which Affinity app you're using, but generally speaking if you want to convert a layered Affinity file to .jpg, .pdf etc you need to Export it rather than Save As... If you have Exported a .pdf from Publisher, it will be a multi-page document which you may need to split into single-page files. See this recent thread for further discussion.
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My daughter is drawing up embroidery/tapestry patterns for Uni - from what I can tell, the document size is entirely up to you, and the resolution isn't that important, but what may be helpful is to set a grid that will match the mesh size of your fabric. You can then place colours within the squares to match the stitches. If you pull down the View menu and choose Grid and Axis manager, you can set the grid spacing to match the mesh spacing of your fabric. Y If you then set Snap to Grid: You can use the Rectangle tool to to fill out the grid. Not sure if that's what you want to do, but hope it helps!
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TBH it's almost overkill. The Web tab start you off with documents based on different monitor sizes and resolutions, the Devices tab starts you off with documents based on the sizes of different phone and tablet screens. If you're just experimenting then it doesn't really matter. If you're designing for a particular format then they may be useful.
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Because they've been converted in-camera, and because Canon have updated DPP to support your spanking new camera when you view its .CR3's. Neither libraw nor Apple's Core Image, which Serif/Affinity use as raw engines, support your camera or its raw format yet. Such is the fate of those who ride the bleeding edge...
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Hi @judy jj A6 or A5? A6 is tiny. However, this should work with any A(x) sheet and will give you two working posters, one at A3 and one at A6. It's a bit more complex than @Paul Mc's suggestion but it it retains both sizes of poster in the same .afd document. First, use the Artboard tool to change your A3 document into an artboard. I also changed the name of my artboard to A3. Next, rasterise the photograph if you haven't already done so - it should show as Pixel in the Layers palette, not Image. This is so you can resize it at the same time as the text. Should look a bit like this: Now duplicate your artboard - click on the Artboard layer in the Layers palette and type Cmd-J (Ctrl-J on a PC). Rename this artboard to A6, drag it away from the A3 artboard in the working area so you can see both. Use the Transform panel to resize the A6 artboard to 105x148: Should look a bit like this: Select all the content of the "A6" artboard and use the Move tool with the resize handle to scale the content and adjust its position within the A6 artboard: Make any aesthetic changes (tracking, vertical spacing...) you think necessary to the smaller poster. Switch to Export Persona and in the Export Options panel select both Artboards, set the Mode to Selection and the preset to PDF (you may need to adjust the Export Options further depending on your printer's requirements.) In the Slices panel, click Export Slices to export both artboards as PDFs: Hope this makes sense...
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deselecting a tool
h_d replied to Luddite's topic in Pre-V2 Archive of Affinity on Desktop Questions (macOS and Windows)
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Hi @roseposy44 and welcome! It look as though you're using a brush or pencil tool to fill the squares on the grid. These will tend to have a soft edge and give the shading effect that you're seeing. Instead, if you enable snapping and turn on Snap to Grid, you can then use the Rectangle tool to draw precise shapes and then fill them with colour. You can also resize the rectangles by dragging the handles, and duplicate them if required. This is from Photo, but it should work the same in Designer and Publisher too: Hope this helps.
