Sizing images in slides

R

RonM

I have a large number of images that have been pre-sized to fit a full-screen
slide. For landscape images, they are mostly 1024x768, for portrait, the
height is 768 pixels, with variable width. At their native size, they should
fit the slide exactly. Some do. But some are displayed as eensy weensy tiny
images in the centre of the screen, with a property that is a fraction of an
inch on each side. There is no difference between the images that are
treated differently, as far as I can tell -- they all started out larger and
were resized in a separate applicaton.

I want the images to be placed in the slide, and to take up as much of the
slide as is appropriate, given their aspect ratio. This isn't happening with
some images, and I don't know why or what to do to fix it.

I'm using Powerpoint 2003 and XP
 
R

RonM

That's not the issue -- I can size the image appropriately, but some images
are placed differently than others the exact same dimensions -- some fill the
slide appropriately, others are placed as a minute pretty much invisible
micro-picture, that can be resized by dragging, but that's a hassle for a
large number.
 
R

RonM

Steve,

I will have a look, but it doesn't really answer my question which perhaps
hasn't been clear:

I can have two identically sized images, typically, say 512x768 -- with a
height of 768, the image is sized to exactly fit the height of the slide.
I've sized these images myself, to fit the ppt screen. However, when
inserted into a slide, one of these images will do what it's supposed to do,
and be displayed correctly, the other one will be inserted as about a 10
pixel by 15 pixel micropicture.

Why are some images handled differently than others? Even with two images
sized as 1024x768, I can get the same result.

All I want is for the images to be displayed as their actual resolution
relative to the slide size.

R.
 
R

RonM

I've checked out the starterset, and it seems that hammering an image to a
previously selected size is what it does. This won't work. All of my images
are exactly 768 pixels high, but variable width. I don't want them to be
hammered to the same aspect ratio, I just want them to be displayed
accorcding to their actual size. I can do that by dragging the corner to
resize, but I shouldn't have to do that, especially not for some images but
not others.

R.
 
R

RonM

Thanks Steve,

The images come from several sources, including my own digital pix and
scans, as well as images from other sources. I hadn't realized there was
embedded original-size info in these images, although I know that this
information is retained in some scanned images. I can't actually see it in
my image applications, although I can see some embedded commentary. Explains
it all. Too bad there isn't a nice straightforward option in ppt to size to
fit slide. Too obvious, I guess.

I will give the fish a try.

R.
 
R

RonM

Just one more conceptual question, Steve.

When I use the hammer to size an image to a remembered dimension, it appears
in the editing window with information that the size is whatever the
dimensions are in the editing window.

When we run the slide show at full screen, does ppt actually make use of all
of the image information contained in the full 1024x768 file? And if I'm
using a projector that only has an 800x600 display capability, how is the
size 'reduction' accomplished?

Hope those questions aren't too stupid.

R.
 
K

Kathy J

Ron, if you don't need the image to move in and out - and you don't care if
it is behind everything else, you can insert the photo as the background.
Right click and select "Background", then click the drop down for the fill
color and select fill effects. Click the Picture Tab, navigate to your
picture. Before you ok your way out, check the Lock Aspect Ratio button.

Want to do this with a number of different pictures? Record a macro or the
process and edit it to prompt you for the picture name and to work for
multiple slides. I did a quick record and it seems to work.

Just another idea for you to consider....

--
Kathryn Jacobs, Microsoft MVP PowerPoint and OneNote
Author of Kathy Jacobs on PowerPoint - Available now from Holy Macro! Books
Get PowerPoint answers at http://www.powerpointanswers.com
I believe life is meant to be lived. But:
if we live without making a difference, it makes no difference that we lived
 
J

John O

The images come from several sources, including my own digital pix and
scans, as well as images from other sources. I hadn't realized there was
embedded original-size info in these images, although I know that this
information is retained in some scanned images. I can't actually see it in
my image applications, although I can see some embedded commentary. Explains
it all. Too bad there isn't a nice straightforward option in ppt to size to
fit slide. Too obvious, I guess.

"EXIF" is the spec for that image data. See:
http://www.outbackphoto.com/workflow/wf_64/essay.html

-John O
 
C

caten

Thank you for explaining why the size of an image imported into PowerPoint
doesn't necessarily match its expected size. I was pulling my hair out
importing a JPG image into PowerPoint and then opening the same JPG image in
Paint (or PhotoEditor or Photoshop) and seeing it displayed at different
sizes.

A few follow-up questions:

1. I've been searching for a list of image formats that specifies whether
or not the format supports embedded DPI/size info but can't find one. Can
you tell me whether BMP, GIF, and JPG formats include embedded info (or point
me to an existing list)?

2. You mentioned that the assumed dpi at which PowerPoint imports an image
varies by PowerPoint version. What dpi does PowerPoint assume in versions
2000, 2002, and 2003? And does this assumption take place only once, upon
import, or is it reinterpreted each time a different version of PowerPoint
opens the file?
 

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