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Reitanos Reitanos is offline
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Default copy picture out of word with full resolution?

In a very smart move, Word keeps the original image and a version that
represents any changes that you've applied, so saving a document with
a single image will generate a web page with 2 images. If I had
thought about this I would have realized that this is necessary to
allow the reset command to work with an image, duh. Nice job MS.

But, my original suggestion to do your image editing in an image
editor is still your best bet; not only do you have better tools, but
having a high resolution version of an image hiding inside a document
that only needs a small version creates a great deal of document
bloat. Also, the resizing algorithms of image editors are much more
precise than the one in Word.

On Jul 10, 1:44*pm, Reitanos wrote:
No, jpg compression is progressive. Try it out, each time you save the
image it is compressed again. That's why I suggested saving it in a
native format and exporting as jpg. Also, Word will damage the image
any time it resizes, but I'm not sure if the damage (which is visually
apparent, often as "fuzziness") is applied to the image permanently so
that an exported image (via save as web page) would degrade or be kept
in its original state. Does anyone know? I guess I'll have to
experiment right now!

On Jul 10, 1:16*pm, Jean-Guy Marcil

wrote:
"Reitanos" wrote:
Why are you pasting the picture into Word in the first place? Just


I believe you read the post too fast...:


document. Now I do not have the original, but I need to edit that picture as
placing the image in Word can cause damage and the act of saving the
image using the web page option will create a jpg even if the original
image was not jpg (note that the compression model used when creating
a jpg is applied EVERY time it is saved and that compression causes a
loss of image quality that progresses with every save).


Do you mean that if I save a document one hundred times, the quality of the
images therein will gradually lower to the point of being almost useless? I
thought that if the JPEG compression scheme was already applied, it won't be
applied again.


To preserve image quality you would be better served saving the image
in the native format of your image editor, modifying the image there,
saving a copy for your document, and then inserting the document
version of the image.


On Jul 9, 6:03 pm, "William Bernat"
wrote:
ENVIRONMENT
Word 2007 SP1. Windows XP SP2.


SCENARIO
I paste a high resolution picture into Word. I shrink the picture to fit my
document. Now I do not have the original, but I need to edit that picture as
a high resolution image. I right-click inside of Word and click copy. I
paste it into a graphics program. The graphic is now low resolution..


QUESTION
I know Word has the high resolution version of it. I just don't know how to
copy it out. Is there a way?


ty,
-billb