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    Set Up For Printing Question

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    • Joe WoodJ Offline
      Joe Wood
      last edited by

      but I've always done that, esp with the 3d images, to get rid of the jaggies?

      so I should resize them to get a clearer print? I don't understand this graphics stuff very well.

      Joe Wood
      woodsshop.com/

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      • Dave RD Offline
        Dave R
        last edited by

        Do what works for you I guess.

        Etaoin Shrdlu

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        • Joe WoodJ Offline
          Joe Wood
          last edited by

          no, that's what I'm asking is how would yu set up these images for printing?

          Joe Wood
          woodsshop.com/

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          • Dave RD Offline
            Dave R
            last edited by

            I would and do set up the scenes in SketchUp to show things as I'll need to see them. Then use those scenes for viewports in LayOut whe I would add any needed dimensions and text. I would render the viewports in Vector or Hybrid as appropriate and make as many pages as needed. Then I would export to PDF and print that with Adobe Reader or Acrobat. Much less screwing around and everything will look better.

            Etaoin Shrdlu

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            • Joe WoodJ Offline
              Joe Wood
              last edited by

              Thanks Dave but I don't want to learn another program my brain is just about full, and I don't know what vector and hybrid mean. I'll just make do, the printed images are a lot better then they used to be.

              Joe Wood
              woodsshop.com/

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              • Dave RD Offline
                Dave R
                last edited by

                You asked me how I would do it. I told you.

                Etaoin Shrdlu

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                • ntxdaveN Offline
                  ntxdave
                  last edited by

                  May this will help: vector and raster explained.

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                  • Joe WoodJ Offline
                    Joe Wood
                    last edited by

                    you're a good guy Dave and have helped me a lot. thanks for trying any way.

                    Joe Wood
                    woodsshop.com/

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                    • ntxdaveN Offline
                      ntxdave
                      last edited by

                      Here is a little bit more info:

                      What is a raster file?
                      Raster files are images built from pixels — tiny color squares that, in great quantity, can form highly detailed images such as photographs. The more pixels an image has, the higher quality it will be, and vice versa. The number of pixels in an image depends on the file type (for example, JPEG, GIF, or PNG).

                      What is a vector file?
                      Vector files use mathematical equations, lines, and curves with fixed points on a grid to produce an image. There are no pixels in a vector file. A vector file’s mathematical formulas capture shape, border, and fill color to build an image. Because the mathematical formula recalibrates to any size, you can scale a vector image up or down without impacting its quality.

                      One of the main differences between raster and vector files is their resolution. The resolution of a raster file is referred to in DPI (dots per inch) or PPI (pixels per inch). If you zoom in or expand the size of a raster image, you start to see the individual pixels.

                      Raster files display a wider array of colors, permit greater color editing, and show finer light and shading than vectors — but they lose image quality when resized. An easy way to tell if an image is raster or vector is to increase its size. If the image becomes blurred or pixelated, it’s most likely a raster file.

                      With vector image files, resolution is not an issue. You can resize, rescale, and reshape vectors infinitely without losing any image quality. Vector files are popular for images that need to appear in a wide variety of sizes, like a logo that needs to fit on both a business card and a billboard.

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                      • Joe WoodJ Offline
                        Joe Wood
                        last edited by

                        sorry, not a graphics guy, I forgot about DPI! What I was mostly doing is setting lineweight to 4, export at 6000, resize to 2200, but at 96 DPI! I just created an image, resized to 2200, but at 300 dpi, and it printed much nicer!

                        so to print on 8x11 paper, what width (at 300 dpi) should I resize these to?

                        Sorry for not understanding sooner Dave! I feel pretty dumb, after all these years, not increasing the dpi for printing the shop drawings!

                        Joe Wood
                        woodsshop.com/

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                        • Dave RD Offline
                          Dave R
                          last edited by

                          @joe wood said:

                          so to print on 8x11 paper, what width (at 300 dpi) should I resize these to?

                          Assume a 1/2" border and a landscape paper orientation. Your image would print as 10 inches wide. Exporting at 3000 pixels wide, then, would give you an image you don't need to resize before printing.
                          Screenshot - 8_7_2023 , 3_00_26 PM.png

                          Etaoin Shrdlu

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                          • Joe WoodJ Offline
                            Joe Wood
                            last edited by

                            right on Dave!

                            Joe Wood
                            woodsshop.com/

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