How to change resolution of pictures in Word 2007

  • Thread starter Thread starter alby
  • Start date Start date
A

alby

From Picture Tools->Format->Adjust->Compress pictures, I can't alter the
default resolution (200 dpi). I want all pictures in the document to be 600
dpi. Any ideas?
 
Hi Alby,

The compression setting doesn't reflect what the original resolution of the pictures are, only what you can choose to (in some
cases) reduce them to to make the document smaller when saved to disk or emailed. The pixel per inch (ppi) settings for a graphic
also don't necessarily correlate to the printers dot per inch (dpi) or quality results.

You can't use the tools to increase a PPI value. Some formats allow you to store a PPI marker in the graphic to use for sizing and
content, others do not. For example .GIF files are 96PPI, while JPGs can be set when they're created.

Word 2000, 2002/XP and 2003 used the information in the graphic to control the display size in the document from the 'Web options'
settings. Word 2007 no longer does, for the most part it seems to assumes 96PPI when no other value is available in inserted JPGs
and the Web Options setting doesn't impact its display size.

==============
From Picture Tools->Format->Adjust->Compress pictures, I can't alter the
default resolution (200 dpi). I want all pictures in the document to be 600 dpi. Any ideas?>>
--

Bob Buckland ?:-)
MS Office System Products MVP

*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*
 
I am trying to create a postcard for commercial printing and all of the
pictures used have original resolutions all above 400 DPI. When I try to set
them to 300 for commercial printing in Publisher they change but never to
300, always lower. I can find no way to get them to 300 in Word either. Would
appreciate any feedback or help. Thanks.
Chris
 
Mary is absolutely right - attempting to alter image resolution in a
glorified text editor is typically a recipe for disaster. If the job is to
be printed commercially I honestly don't know why you want to downsample the
images in the first place.

Regards |:>)
Bob Jones
[MVP] Office:Mac
 
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