Comments: 7
peaceflow In reply to aripowwel [2004-04-25 05:22:09 +0000 UTC]
oh yeah, oops. thanks for pointint that out. *blush*
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peaceflow In reply to aripowwel [2004-04-25 05:26:59 +0000 UTC]
aww.. haha you're so sweet
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Reepicheep-chan [2004-04-24 04:53:51 +0000 UTC]
I like the delicate, slender feel. It's very Sailor Moon manga-y. The pic seems bit grainy at this size though, I'd recommend making it smaller.
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peaceflow In reply to Reepicheep-chan [2004-04-24 05:18:59 +0000 UTC]
how do i make it smaller? i only know that it looks a great deal better at the smaller view. *sigh*
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Reepicheep-chan In reply to peaceflow [2004-04-25 02:02:02 +0000 UTC]
Either you scan it at a smaller resolution- I don't know how your scanner softwar is set up, but usually it either asks you for a resolution before you scan, or you can configure it under the settings somewhere. If the pic you're scanning is going to be put on the wed, you are going to want it scanned at 75 DPIs. DPI is dots per inch, which is basically how many pixles are used to represent on inch of picture. Someone with and 800x600 moniter is displaying graphics aroun 72 DPI, so for web stuff people usually use this resolution.
Or, you can pop the image in an image editing program and shirnk it up a bit. I don't know what software you have. For optimisation the best is probably Macromedia Fireworks, but that's expensive web desighner stuff. If you have Microsoft Photo Editor or Paint Shop Pro, those will do nicely. You Open the image in the program and go to "Edit" on the menu. Usually there will be an "Image Size" option. Make sure it's locked to automaticallt adjust the hieght to be proportional to the width, and change the width to be around 790 px. You can do the in MS paint, if that's all you have. Unless you have a Mac, and don't have MS paint ^.^; Then I can't help you, but I'd bet the same principle applies to whatever basic image thing you have. Good Luck ^.^
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