- Epson Perfection 1260 Scan for Email - Images Too Large
- Posted by johnandjanet@gmail.com on November 15th, 2005
I have tried three times to scan 7 documents for Email using my Epson
Perfection 1260 scanner. The first time the resolution was 150.
Resultant images I emailed to myself were much to large. Tried 110
resolution. Still too large. Tried 100 resolution. Still to large.
What I want is actual size. These are 8.5 x 11 documents. How can I get
them scanned at original size?
With each of the three efforts I had to start from scratch and scan all
7 documents instead of being able to manipulate them until they were
the right size. Is there anyway around this?
Thanks so much. Time is of the essence.
John
mailto:johnandjanet@gmail.com
- Posted by drc023 on November 15th, 2005
You might get better responses by posting to comp.periphs.scanners instead
of this newsgroup which is for printers. However, I will ask what type of
document setting are you using for the scanner? Is it color photo, color
document, b/w photo, line art, b/w text, etc...? Have you edited them with a
photo editor and set the image size? As a last resort you might want to put
the documents into a pdf file. If you don't have a pdf application, this
freebie is great www.primopdf.com.
--
Ron
<johnandjanet@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1132023973.384064.101980@g47g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com...
- Posted by johnandjanet@gmail.com on November 15th, 2005
Document setting is b/w text, etc.
I'm getting too tired to deal with this any more tonight.
Downloaded and installed primopdf. That was a mistake. It planted no
less than 11 shortcuts on my desktop and I found the program not
terribly intuitive.
I am simply trying to scan 7 8.5 x 11 black and white documents
(invoices) and email the scanned documents. All I want is for the
documents attached to my email be the same size as the original. I've
tried the manual approach and the automatic approach. I'll give it
another shot in the morning.
Thanks very much for try to help a hapless non-scanner.
John
- Posted by Knightcrawler on November 15th, 2005
72 dpi
<johnandjanet@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1132023973.384064.101980@g47g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com...
- Posted by Tim S. on November 15th, 2005
johnandjanet@gmail.com wrote:
You might try this site...It will answer all your questions.
http://www.scantips.com/
Tim
- Posted by Arthur Entlich on November 15th, 2005
Most computer displays use between 72 and 100 dpi so using a resolution
within that area will provide something approaching the original size.
The problem is there is really no standard for screen display, it
depends upon the resolution the monitor is set to, and which
manufacturer your computer is made by, since Apples uses a differing
resolution than PCs do.
Try 72 dpi and see if that works. If you are mailing the images
elsewhere, their screen resolution may differ from your own.
Art
johnandjanet@gmail.com wrote:
- Posted by Jon O'Brien on November 15th, 2005
In article <1132023973.384064.101980@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
johnandjanet@gmail.com () wrote:
Size is relative and depends on the display technology. Are you trying to
print the documents or display them on your monitor?
If it's the former, then print at the same resolution you scanned at and
the documents will be the same size.
If it's the latter, then they should be either 72 DPI or 96 DPI, depending
on how your display is set up. If using Windows, right click on the
desktop, select Properties, Advanced, General. The DPI setting will be
shown there.
Jon.
- Posted by Arthur Entlich on November 15th, 2005
When you say you want them to be the same size, I'm not sure where you
want them to be the same size.
Do you mean showing on the screen of a web browser or email client
program, or do you mean when printed?
If, for instance you are sending them to someone, who will then print
them on a 300 dpi laser printer, then you need to scan them at 300 dpi
on your scanner so they may print them back to the 300 dpi laser printer
at the same size.
If you want them to print the document, I suggest you scan at at least
300 dpi so the text is easy from them to read when printed.
However, if you want the image to be about the same size on their
display as it is in real life, that gets trickier, as I mentioned before.
Art
ohnandjanet@gmail.com wrote:
- Posted by johnandjanet@gmail.com on November 16th, 2005
Thank you very much. I scanned them at 96 and the recipient in
Lithuwania said they came through great.
Thanks for your help.
- Posted by johnandjanet@gmail.com on November 16th, 2005
Thanks for your help, Jon. 96 dpi worked. The recipient received them
and printed them out. She reported they were fine.
Thanks so much for taking the time to help me out.
John
- Posted by Jon O'Brien on November 16th, 2005
In article <1132111277.160268.145890@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
johnandjanet@gmail.com () wrote:
You're welcome. That's what the newsgroup's for!
Jon.