• Login
sketchucation logo sketchucation
  • Login
๐Ÿค‘ SketchPlus 1.3 | 44 Tools for $15 until June 20th Buy Now

Exporting to PDF-- image quality problem

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Newbie Forum
sketchup
34 Posts 7 Posters 3.3k Views 7 Watching
Loading More Posts
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • G Offline
    Goggin
    last edited by 14 Dec 2007, 00:04

    @anssi said:

    I had no problem exporting.

    I didn't either!

    But then I figured out what the problem is. I have to use 2D export to get the .pdf option, and in that case it only exports what's visible on the screen. In order for me to get the whole floorplan on the screen, I have to make it much smaller. In that case, you don't get individual lines-- it's like you did a screen capture, and you lose all the detail.

    Try it again with that bathroom floorplan shrunk down like this (don't adjust the magnification):

    Link

    Interestingly, this seems to happen the same way when you use "insert" in LayOut. You only get what's visible on the screen from the .skp file. And if you shrink it down enough to get an entire floorplan (in my case a set of floorplans), you just end up with a blurry image.

    Maybe I'm missing something, but if you can't export to Acrobat at scale, and at 24x36 paper size, then it's not much use in a real-world situation, because that's what's you're going to have to give to builders and city planning depts., etc. I have to believe that this has been worked out, and that I am missing something.

    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
    • G Offline
      Gaieus
      last edited by 14 Dec 2007, 08:58

      I cannot jump into the discussion now as I'm not at home with my Pro version to export PDF.

      So I just about Gadwin Print screen; you can select the output file type - jpg (as it can be compressed) is the smallest.
      ๐Ÿ˜„

      Gai...

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • A Offline
        Anssi
        last edited by 14 Dec 2007, 18:36

        @goggin said:

        But then I figured out what the problem is. I have to use 2D export to get the .pdf option, and in that case it only exports what's visible on the screen. In order for me to get the whole floorplan on the screen, I have to make it much smaller. In that case, you don't get individual lines-- it's like you did a screen capture, and you lose all the detail.
        Maybe I'm missing something, but if you can't export to Acrobat at scale, and at 24x36 paper size, then it's not much use in a real-world situation, because that's what's you're going to have to give to builders and city planning depts., etc. I have to believe that this has been worked out, and that I am missing something.

        Yes, you are missing something. The point of the profile settings is that the "match screen" setting does literally that: the profile line thickness is set in proportion of the screen display, so in your case, if you magnify the plan to four feet wide, the profile thicknesses will follow suit. So you must just untick the "match screen" setting, and decide yourself how wide you want your lines to be. Attached is the setting you probably used
        screen1.png
        and the PDF you probably got
        testi1.pdf
        Then my new settings, with all lines at .25 mm thickness
        screen2.png
        And the result-see next post, it seems to limit to 3 attachments

        Anssi

        securi adversus homines, securi adversus deos rem difficillimam adsecuti sunt, ut illis ne voto quidem opus esset

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • A Offline
          Anssi
          last edited by 14 Dec 2007, 18:37

          And here is the "final" file:
          testi2.pdf
          Anssi

          securi adversus homines, securi adversus deos rem difficillimam adsecuti sunt, ut illis ne voto quidem opus esset

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • G Offline
            Goggin
            last edited by 14 Dec 2007, 19:18

            @anssi said:

            And here is the "final" file:
            [attachment=0:3ba0xxza]<!-- ia0 -->testi2.pdf<!-- ia0 -->[/attachment:3ba0xxza]
            Anssi

            Thank-you, Thank-you, Thank-you!!! That does indeed do the trick.

            I would have never figured that out from just reading the documentation on Exporting in the "Help" section.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • G Offline
              Gaieus
              last edited by 15 Dec 2007, 11:16

              That was a nice one, Anssi, thanks a lot!

              Gai...

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • G Offline
                Goggin
                last edited by 20 Dec 2007, 23:25

                I hate to bother you guys again about something similar, but I'm still stuck on how to get a high quality floorplan into LayOut. You don't "export" to LayOut, you use the "send to LayOut" command. But there aren't any options to set the linewidths (as there are for the export command), it just sends the file. I've tried changing the quality to 300 DPI in LayOut, but that didn't help. I was hoping to use LayOut to do some text labeling since SketchUp is very limited as to what you can do with text.

                BTW-- LayOut seems to be a tremendous memory hog, but that's another issue. Just a simple floorplan, to scale, brings my computer to its knees!

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • J Offline
                  jhauswirth
                  last edited by 21 Dec 2007, 04:12

                  Don't use 300 dpi in LayOut until you're ready to export to PDF or print, do 72 dpi while you're creating your doc.

                  Line thickness is in the style tab in the Sketchup Inspector. Its in points.
                  So try 0.2.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • G Offline
                    Goggin
                    last edited by 21 Dec 2007, 14:38

                    @jhauswirth said:

                    Don't use 300 dpi in LayOut until you're ready to export to PDF or print, do 72 dpi while you're creating your doc.

                    Yeah, I figured that out quick!

                    @unknownuser said:

                    Line thickness is in the style tab in the Sketchup Inspector. Its in points.
                    So try 0.2.

                    Sorry, but what is "SketchUp Inspector"? I did a search for "Inspector" on the help page, and it came up blank.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • G Offline
                      Gaieus
                      last edited by 21 Dec 2007, 15:03

                      Goggin,

                      That's the "SketchUp Model" tab in your tray. See snapshot (and the lineweight setting input field where my cursor is)

                      http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/Layout/SUInspector.png

                      Gai...

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • G Offline
                        Goggin
                        last edited by 21 Dec 2007, 16:11

                        Oh, that's in LayOut. I was looking in SketchUp. I'll try that later today.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • G Offline
                          Goggin
                          last edited by 22 Dec 2007, 17:50

                          Yep, that worked. Thanks, Gaieus.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • G Offline
                            Gaieus
                            last edited by 22 Dec 2007, 21:05

                            ๐Ÿ˜›

                            Gai...

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • 1
                            • 2
                            • 2 / 2
                            2 / 2
                            • First post
                              31/34
                              Last post
                            Buy SketchPlus
                            Buy SUbD
                            Buy WrapR
                            Buy eBook
                            Buy Modelur
                            Buy Vertex Tools
                            Buy SketchCuisine
                            Buy FormFonts

                            Advertisement