Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-29 Thread Greg Chapman

On 28 Sep 10 20:12 Ofnuts ofn...@laposte.net said:
 Fuzziness may come from the feathering. But lack of feathering can
 also create another kind of fuzziness.

JPEG artifacts are likely to give text or any area around solid colour
fuzziness too!

Greg Chapman
http://www.gregtutor.plus.com
Helping new users of KompoZer and The GIMP
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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread forums
I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
letters. 

Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the fuzziness?

Thanks,


-- 
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread Ofnuts
  On 28/09/2010 20:01, for...@gimpusers.com wrote:
 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.
 Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the fuzziness?


Depends what you call fuzzy. Do you have a screen-shot? Or even better, 
your XCF file?

Fuzziness may come from the feathering. But lack of feathering can 
also create another kind of fuzziness.

JPEG doesn't support transparency.

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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread John Mills
Finally - one I may be able to answer ..

Try scaling the image close to the size and resolution you expect to print 
_before_ you add the text. I believe the text is essentially bitmapped 
onto your image when you add it. If your printing implies a substantial 
enlargement you may be looking at the edges of the text as it was 
rendered.

Just a guess, but I had a similar problem when I started out and that was 
the reason for ragged edges and fuzzy characters on my text. You may even 
want to create your image at higher resolution than you will print it -- 
at least once or twice as experiments.

HTH.

  - Mills

On Tue, 28 Sep 2010, for...@gimpusers.com wrote:

 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.

 Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the fuzziness?

 Thanks,

 dev19 (via gimpusers.com)
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread Jay Smith
On 09/28/2010 05:11 PM, John Mills wrote:
 Finally - one I may be able to answer ..

 Try scaling the image close to the size and resolution you expect to print
 _before_ you add the text. I believe the text is essentially bitmapped
 onto your image when you add it. If your printing implies a substantial
 enlargement you may be looking at the edges of the text as it was
 rendered.

 Just a guess, but I had a similar problem when I started out and that was
 the reason for ragged edges and fuzzy characters on my text. You may even
 want to create your image at higher resolution than you will print it --
 at least once or twice as experiments.

 HTH.

- Mills

 On Tue, 28 Sep 2010, for...@gimpusers.com wrote:

 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.

 Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the fuzziness?

 Thanks,

 dev19 (via gimpusers.com)


I agree completely with Mills and a previous poster.  I find that 99% of the 
time logos have been created at too low a resolution.

Because the target size of a logo can vary tremendously (from business cards to 
the side of a 40-foot-long truck) it is extremely important to do the creation 
(and to maintain the original file) at very high resolution.

You might think it absurd to create logo artwork at 2000 dpi, until next year 
when you need to put it on a 8-foot-wide banner or the side of a building.

Save the original at that high resolution -- and be sure to save multiple 
copies in multiple physical locations; that logo might be in use for 20 years 
or 
more (mine is almost at 30 years) and they have a way of getting misplaced.

Then when you need to make a new target, COPY the original file to 
target-specific name.  Then, after copying, size it down and *simultaneously* 
reduce the resolution to the appropriate resolution for the output device (i.e. 
laser printer probably 300 or 600 dpi).

Also, depending upon the type of artwork, consider using a vector-based image 
program instead of a bitmap-based program such as Gimp.  A vector-based image 
is 
supposed (?) to scale up and down without any of these issues, but it is not 
appropriate for all types of images.

Jay
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread Josh Bialkowski
 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.

Scaling is one reason for the fuzziness, the second is compression. 
JPEG, GIF, and PNG are compressed formats (though PNG can be 
uncompressed), so the compression can lead to fuzziness around the 
edges. You could try to save in an uncompressed format, or reduce the 
compression (i.e. if you save JPEG and you get that slider during 
export, push it all the way up to 100).

In general though, a logo is an image that gets a lot of use. It will 
likely be scaled or compressed for various different paper sizes, 
Internet publication, banners, etc. It's a good idea to do logo design 
in an inherently scalable (a.k.a vector) format (i.e. Scalable Vector 
Graphics Format... SVG). I don't mean to knock Gimp on the Gimp list, 
but it might not be the right tool for the job. Inkscape is an open 
source tool for designing scalable images. Adobe Illustrator is a 
proprietary alternative. They don't have the powerful tools that Gimp 
does for creating really exotic images, but that is likely a moot point 
for a logo.

If you create your image in a scalable format you can also use it in 
your PDF documents without any loss of quality... regardless of whether 
that document is a letter-head, or a building-sized banner. If you 
include your logo as a 2 inch wide image, and then someone who is 
reading your document blows it up to 1000%, the logo will still be 
crystal clear. This, of course, depends on what you use to create your 
PDF. Word, for instance, may render the scalable image to a bitmap, and 
then save the bitmap in the PDF.
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-09-28 Thread Ofnuts
  On 28/09/2010 23:43, Josh Bialkowski wrote:
 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.
 Scaling is one reason for the fuzziness, the second is compression.
 JPEG, GIF, and PNG are compressed formats (though PNG can be
 uncompressed), so the compression can lead to fuzziness around the
 edges. You could try to save in an uncompressed format, or reduce the
 compression (i.e. if you save JPEG and you get that slider during
 export, push it all the way up to 100).

Do not mix up plain compression and lossy compression. JPEG is lossy and 
can lead to artifacts. GIF and PNG aren't (although GIF, being 
restricted to 256 unique colors, can suffer from dithering).

I otherwise fully agree with the vector graphic suggestion.



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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Tőkés Ábel
3/22/2010 9:55 PM keltezéssel, bennettjon írta:
 On 3/22/2010 3:51 PM, bennettjon wrote:
  
 Thanks Stefan for the quick reply. I will upload some images. However,

 the

 issue is not fuzziness in GIMP. The fuzziness occurs when inserting into

 Word

 or Excel and either printing or converting to PDF.



 Ok, that makes much more sense. Issues like that spring up from time to
 time on this mailing list.
  

 So what is the solution?


Hi!

I make a lot of word documents packed with photos and other kinds of 
bitmap pictures in them,
and I usually make pdf of them as a result. This is part of my work.

 From the behavior of these documents I got to the conclusion that Word 
stores all bitmap pictures
in a jpg format. This is independent from the source of the picture 
(whether it was inserted as a picture
file or just pasted from the clipboard.) So, every time I save the 
document, more and more jpeg errors
are produced in all pictures. This effect can be reduced if the 
resolution of the images is kept high
(eg. 200 dpi), but this makes the filesize big and is not an option for 
all kinds of pictures.
This effect is mostly annoying in case of pictures thats natural format 
would be png: that include
just a few colors, like drawings and screenshots. These pictures are 
made ugly and make the filesize
irrationally big.

Moreover, when I print to pdf, all the pictures are made 96 dpi (just a 
guess, it seems to be optimized for
screen), and full of jpeg noise. So, the pdf-s are even more ugly than 
the doc. I don't know any options
that could be set in pdf creation.

I think that a good pdf printer should have some settings for image 
compression, and office should have
more options. I only know of the compression rate, where you have three 
options: leave it big,
set to 200 dpi (for prinit), or set to 96 dpi (screen). I think this is 
quite poor. I know some about word,
but there is much more that I don't know, so there may be more advanced 
settings. But I doubt.

So, if anyone knows an answer, please let us know!

Abel

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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Cristian Secară
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 08:41:09 +0100, Tőkés Ábel wrote:

 From the behavior of these documents I got to the conclusion that
 Word stores all bitmap pictures in a jpg format. This is independent
 from the source of the picture (whether it was inserted as a picture
 file or just pasted from the clipboard.) So, every time I save the
 document, more and more jpeg errors are produced in all pictures.

This is not true, or at least not true in just any case.

Look at the these two snapshots
http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test.png
http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test_word_to_paint.png

The png_test_word_to_paint.png is the result of this:
I opened a blank Word document (Office 2003)
I dragged the file test.png onto it
I saved the document without closing
I wrote something
I closed the document with save
I opened the document and wrote something
I closed the document with save
I opened the document
I copied the image in clipboard
I opened Paint and pasted the clipboard there
I saved the image from Paint as .png

Ok, the saved image has fewer colors (so it is no longer the perfect
original), but as it looks it has *never* been in JPEG format.

Cristi

-- 
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http://www.secarica.ro/
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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread bennettjon
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 08:41:09 +0100, Tokes Abel wrote:

 From the behavior of these documents I got to the conclusion that
 Word stores all bitmap pictures in a jpg format. This is independent
 from the source of the picture (whether it was inserted as a picture
 file or just pasted from the clipboard.) So, every time I save the
 document, more and more jpeg errors are produced in all pictures.

This is not true, or at least not true in just any case.

Look at the these two snapshots
http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test.png
http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test_word_to_paint.png

The png_test_word_to_paint.png is the result of this:
I opened a blank Word document (Office 2003)
I dragged the file test.png onto it
I saved the document without closing
I wrote something
I closed the document with save
I opened the document and wrote something
I closed the document with save
I opened the document
I copied the image in clipboard
I opened Paint and pasted the clipboard there
I saved the image from Paint as .png

Ok, the saved image has fewer colors (so it is no longer the perfect
original), but as it looks it has *never* been in JPEG format.

Cristi

But, we still don't have a good solution to using these images in Word and
converting to PDF without the noise. Of course, it's possible - I've seen it
many times. There must be a process to do this successfully. Does anyone know
how?

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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Tőkés Ábel
3/23/2010 1:20 PM keltezéssel, Cristian Secară írta:
 On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 08:41:09 +0100, Tőkés Ábel wrote:


  From the behavior of these documents I got to the conclusion that
 Word stores all bitmap pictures in a jpg format. This is independent
 from the source of the picture (whether it was inserted as a picture
 file or just pasted from the clipboard.) So, every time I save the
 document, more and more jpeg errors are produced in all pictures.
  
 This is not true, or at least not true in just any case.

 Look at the these two snapshots
 http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test.png
 http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test_word_to_paint.png

 The png_test_word_to_paint.png is the result of this:
 I opened a blank Word document (Office 2003)
 I dragged the file test.png onto it
 I saved the document without closing
 I wrote something
 I closed the document with save
 I opened the document and wrote something
 I closed the document with save
 I opened the document
 I copied the image in clipboard
 I opened Paint and pasted the clipboard there
 I saved the image from Paint as .png

 Ok, the saved image has fewer colors (so it is no longer the perfect
 original), but as it looks it has *never* been in JPEG format.

 Cristi


You are right. I wasn't able to reproduce jpeg failures with Word.
I thought that it came from image compression,
but I wasn't able to make noise by it either. I will have to find out
where noisy images in my docs come from. It seems that Word is
more clever that I supposed.

For me it seems that the problem is with the pdf printer. I tried Adobe 
Elements and
CutePDF. Both added jpeg noise. Surprisingly, CutePDF gave somewhat 
better results,
though it was free and we paid for Elements, and I prefer Elements in 
most cases.

I am afraid we are becoming more and more offtopic, as this is obviously 
a pdf printer issue,
and probably office issue, but not Gimp issue.

Abel


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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread bennettjon
3/23/2010 1:20 PM keltezessel, Cristian Secara irta:
 On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 08:41:09 +0100, Tokes Abel wrote:


  From the behavior of these documents I got to the conclusion that
 Word stores all bitmap pictures in a jpg format. This is independent
 from the source of the picture (whether it was inserted as a picture
 file or just pasted from the clipboard.) So, every time I save the
 document, more and more jpeg errors are produced in all pictures.
  
 This is not true, or at least not true in just any case.

 Look at the these two snapshots
 http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test.png
 http://www.secarica.ro/misc/png_test_word_to_paint.png

 The png_test_word_to_paint.png is the result of this:
 I opened a blank Word document (Office 2003)
 I dragged the file test.png onto it
 I saved the document without closing
 I wrote something
 I closed the document with save
 I opened the document and wrote something
 I closed the document with save
 I opened the document
 I copied the image in clipboard
 I opened Paint and pasted the clipboard there
 I saved the image from Paint as .png

 Ok, the saved image has fewer colors (so it is no longer the perfect
 original), but as it looks it has *never* been in JPEG format.

 Cristi


You are right. I wasn't able to reproduce jpeg failures with Word.
I thought that it came from image compression,
but I wasn't able to make noise by it either. I will have to find out
where noisy images in my docs come from. It seems that Word is
more clever that I supposed.

For me it seems that the problem is with the pdf printer. I tried Adobe 
Elements and
CutePDF. Both added jpeg noise. Surprisingly, CutePDF gave somewhat 
better results,
though it was free and we paid for Elements, and I prefer Elements in 
most cases.

I am afraid we are becoming more and more offtopic, as this is obviously 
a pdf printer issue,
and probably office issue, but not Gimp issue.

Abel

I think you are right...but it affects all of us as Gimp users, as we are
creating images in Gimp that we ultimately want to use in PDF docs.

-- 
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Chris Mohler
On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 9:48 AM, bennettjon for...@gimpusers.com wrote:
 I think you are right...but it affects all of us as Gimp users, as we are
 creating images in Gimp that we ultimately want to use in PDF docs.

A shot in the dark - have you tried using OpenOffice instead of Word?

Create a new doc, paste in (or insert) your image, then File-Export PDF.

Chris

PS - Scribus also produces quality PDFs, but may not be usable on
Windows (or it wasn't the last time I checked, but that was quite some
time ago).
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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Torsten Neuer
Am Dienstag, 23. März 2010 17:14:12 schrieb Chris Mohler:
 On Tue, Mar 23, 2010 at 9:48 AM, bennettjon for...@gimpusers.com wrote:
  I think you are right...but it affects all of us as Gimp users, as we are
  creating images in Gimp that we ultimately want to use in PDF docs.
 
 A shot in the dark - have you tried using OpenOffice instead of Word?
 
 Create a new doc, paste in (or insert) your image, then File-Export PDF.

Most PDF exporters have some options (mostly hidden away deeply inside some 
obscure menus). Example: When you export to PDF from OO.org, you can do either 
directly or via the menu entry in the File menu. The difference being that the 
direct conversion does not pop up an option window while the menu one does. 
This option window enables the user, amongst other things, to specify how 
images are to be embedded in the PDF. Mostly, with some converters, this 
defaults to low-quality PDF-for-WWW-download (something like 72dpi for the 
images).

CutePDF on Windows can be controlled, too (right-click, properties, common, 
printer settings, paper/quality, extended options lets you set the dpi for 
embedding graphics - default should be 600dpi which is good for photo, but may 
be much too low for graphically rendered text).

Second to dpi would be the compression method used by the PDF, which often 
defaults to JPEG. In Scribus and OO.org this can be adjusted in the PDF 
exporter as well.

So my advice would be to look for those options that control the output 
quality of embedded pictures in order to get a better result.

 PS - Scribus also produces quality PDFs, but may not be usable on
 Windows (or it wasn't the last time I checked, but that was quite some
 time ago).

AFAIK, Scribus on Windows is usable (and available in the same version as in 
the Unix world). At least, I do use it when I have no Linux machine at hand... 
;-)


hth

  Torsten


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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-23 Thread Cristian Secară
On Tue, 23 Mar 2010 15:09:40 +0100 (CET), bennettjon wrote:

 But, we still don't have a good solution to using these images in
 Word and converting to PDF without the noise. Of course, it's
 possible - I've seen it many times. There must be a process to do
 this successfully. Does anyone know how?

When I need clean images in a .pdf document (assuming I have
clean lossless format images in the source document), I use either of
the two:

1. I have Adobe PostScript driver installed as a printer, with which I
create .ps files; then I use Adobe Acrobat Distiller 5 (version 5,
because this is what I have; don't know about more recent versions)
with Settings - Job Options... - Compression - both color images
and grayscale images set to ZIP
or
2. I use OpenOffice Writer (or use OO also for MS Word documents if
the slightly layout differences are not strict) and create the .pdf with
the OO built-in menu command

(Scribus is also a good option, but may be a different thing/scope)

Otherwise I tried Ghostscript  GSView, or PDFWriter, but I have never
been able to find an option to force the creation of a .pdf with images
*not* converted to JPEG.

Cristi

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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-22 Thread bennettjon
On 3/17/2010 3:55 PM, bennettjon wrote:
 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and
then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.

 Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the
fuzziness?

 Thanks,


It would be great if you could show us an example.

It is my understanding that it is fuzzy after you save it, but not fuzzy 
when viewed in gimp? Is this correct?

Stefan Maerz

Yes, that is correct. 

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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-22 Thread bennettjon
On 3/17/2010 3:55 PM, bennettjon wrote:
 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and
then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters.

 Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the
fuzziness?

 Thanks,


It would be great if you could show us an example.

It is my understanding that it is fuzzy after you save it, but not fuzzy 
when viewed in gimp? Is this correct?

Stefan Maerz

You can see the logo at www.breathewell.com

-- 
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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-22 Thread bennettjon
On 3/22/2010 3:22 PM, bennettjon wrote:

 You can see the logo at www.breathewell.com


Ok, well, what I meant was if you could show us a picture of the saved 
file that is fuzzy, not the good looking one.

However, my guess is that you are compressing it too much or a wrong 
filetype when you save it.

Step by step it should be like this when you save, I don't know exactly 
what you have done while you are saving, so I go through step by step 
just in case:
1. File/Save
2. Find your directory
3. Type a name for your file followed by either .jpg or .png

4a.If saving as a JPEG, then hit save button, and make sure the quality 
is around 85. Note if you hit the show preview in image window check 
box, it will calculate a file size and show you a preview. You will 
probably have to export it to a flattened image somewhere in this step.

4b.If saving as a PNG, then from my understanding the Compression level 
does not affect image quality, however it affects file size and 
rendering time. I would set the compression to 9, as it will create a 
nice small file size for you. I would also hit the load defaults 
button, just in case one of these settings got hit.



If you could upload the picture that is fuzzy to a host like image shack 
and share it with us, it would probably help us out if the saving fix I 
suggested does not work.

Stefan Maerz

Thanks Stefan for the quick reply. I will upload some images. However, the
issue is not fuzziness in GIMP. The fuzziness occurs when inserting into Word
or Excel and either printing or converting to PDF. 

-- 
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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-22 Thread bennettjon
On 3/22/2010 3:51 PM, bennettjon wrote:
 Thanks Stefan for the quick reply. I will upload some images. However,
the
 issue is not fuzziness in GIMP. The fuzziness occurs when inserting into
Word
 or Excel and either printing or converting to PDF.


Ok, that makes much more sense. Issues like that spring up from time to 
time on this mailing list.


So what is the solution?

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Re: [Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-18 Thread Olivier Lecarme
bennettjon for...@gimpusers.com wrote:

 I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
 transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
 upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
 letters. 

What is the size of your characters? Could you show an example of your
logo?

-- 


Olivier Lecarme
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[Gimp-user] fuzzy around text

2010-03-17 Thread bennettjon
I'm new to Gimp and graphic design. I was able to create a logo with a
transparent background. However, when I convert to jpg gif or png and then
upload to my server (or insert into Word or PDF) it's fuzzy around the
letters. 

Any idea what to do to keep it looking sharp and get rid of the fuzziness?

Thanks,

-- 
bennettjon (via www.gimpusers.com)
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