P
Paul Mennen
I captured a screenshot as a gif image and used "insert", "picture",
"from file" to import it into a document (Word 2000). When I look
at the gif in photoshop, it looks clean - i.e. all the colors are
solid. When I look at it in Word, the background color in the gif
screen shot (a dark brown of sorts) looks like a moiré pattern
containing at least two colors. This gives an impression of very
low picture quality.
Can Word be told to import the colors without doctoring them?
Actually I'm not too concerned about the color itself. If word
transformed it to a similarly dark color that would be ok as
long as it is solid. Or do I have to go back to my original application
and change the background color to one that word can handle? And
if so, how do I determine which colors Word likes?
By the way, this is not a photograph, so jpg would not be appropriate.
I could use .bmp, but I think I tried that with no improvement.
~Paul
"from file" to import it into a document (Word 2000). When I look
at the gif in photoshop, it looks clean - i.e. all the colors are
solid. When I look at it in Word, the background color in the gif
screen shot (a dark brown of sorts) looks like a moiré pattern
containing at least two colors. This gives an impression of very
low picture quality.
Can Word be told to import the colors without doctoring them?
Actually I'm not too concerned about the color itself. If word
transformed it to a similarly dark color that would be ok as
long as it is solid. Or do I have to go back to my original application
and change the background color to one that word can handle? And
if so, how do I determine which colors Word likes?
By the way, this is not a photograph, so jpg would not be appropriate.
I could use .bmp, but I think I tried that with no improvement.
~Paul