Change the import DPI. This will retain the image quality while reducing the size of the image by incorporating more dots per inch. So long as you don't exceed 600 DPI for the image, it will print just fine on your 600 DPI printer.
If you resize the image, in a photo editor or some such application, you will be throwing away image information (pixels) and will be forcing the software to reinterpret the pixel order of the newly sized image, creating distortion/noise. Don't do that. ;-) I have a rule for print to standardize screen shots (native 96 DPI) at 150 DPI. It reduces the image enough to not hog page real estate but still makes the image easy to see. I adjust accordingly if I am showing detail (tiny icons and such are imported at 96 DPI) or if I have an abnormally large screen shot (perhaps imported at 180 DPI or more) though I try to reduce the screens to the smallest native view before capturing them to avoid this. On Fri, Oct 29, 2010 at 7:32 AM, Andersen, Verner Engell VEA <verner.ander...@radiometer.dk> wrote: > Hello > > I have several screen shots in my A4 manual that are too big to be > printed within the margins of my A4 paper. > > How do I reduce the dimension of the screen shot to make it print within > the marigins? Do I resize or do I change the dpi settings? > Of course I still want the scren shot to print fine on my 600 dpi > printer > > Best regards, > > Verner Anderse -- Bill Swallow Twitter: @techcommdood Blog: http://techcommdood.com LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/techcommdood _______________________________________________ You are currently subscribed to framers as arch...@mail-archive.com. Send list messages to fram...@lists.frameusers.com. To unsubscribe send a blank email to framers-unsubscr...@lists.frameusers.com or visit http://lists.frameusers.com/mailman/options/framers/archive%40mail-archive.com Send administrative questions to listad...@frameusers.com. Visit http://www.frameusers.com/ for more resources and info.