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Philips Pronto Classic Forum - View Post
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The following page was printed from RemoteCentral.com:
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quick tips for smoothing out web...
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| Topic: | quick tips for smoothing out web graphics??? This thread has 2 replies. Displaying all posts. |
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| Post 1 made on Friday June 28, 2002 at 01:02 |
Hello everyone =) Just wondering if anyone had any tips on smoothing out graphics grabbed from the web?? My objective is basically to have radio station logos as favorites (or any picute found on the web for that matter). The way I've been going about it so far is ...
1) checking around for whatever graphic that was appealing
2) right clicking the pic and saving it to the puter
3) then "TRYING" to edit the pic well enough so that it looks decent once loaded.
My problem so far is once i resize the picture, it turns out very jaggy. I know there is anti-lansing for computers (like for videogames) that take care of this somewhat, but I have no clue on how to do this, or what programs can do it. I have some good programs at my disposal (photoshop 6, corel draw 10, fireworks mx) ...BUT, i am not that good with using them ::sigh:: So this is where you come in (hopefully) ...please =) Any help a kind sole can give will be greatly appreciated!!!
Thanx for all the help so far ...this site is great!!
This message was edited by MrEBean on 06/28/02 01:03.40.
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| Post 2 made on Friday June 28, 2002 at 02:24 |
Peter Dewildt Loyal Member |
Joined: Posts: | July 2001 6,307 |
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Start by reading Daniel's article on producing good graphics. It is in the Features section.
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Peter Pronto 1000 (retired), Pronto TSU7000, RFX6000 (retired) Pronto 2xTSU9600, RFX9400 |
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| Post 3 made on Friday June 28, 2002 at 08:04 |
Darnitol Universal Remote Control Inc. |
Joined: Posts: | June 1999 2,058 |
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The quickest tip for smoothing graphics that you're scaling down is to start by converting the image to 24-bit color. THEN scale the image down. Do whatever editing you want (I usually do an Unsharp Mask) then convert back to the ProntoPro palette.
Daniel's article goes into much better detail than this, but this will at least get you started.
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