Therefore, zoom into the part ~4x and take multiple screen captures of different areas of the model You'll need a minimum of 16 to get the rez, but with overlaps you'll need a bit more. If you want a 300dpi image, and the screen capture gives you 72dpi, you will need 4x4 times as much detail (as dpi is dots per linear inch, and we are talking area). RE: Non-White Paper Color TIF File from Drawing ctopher (Mechanical) 18 May 05 15:13Ī rather long-winded workaround is as follows: To make resolution higher HyperSnap would have to somehow invent and insert dots in-between screen pixels - nothing that would really give you good results. There are about 96 pixels per inch on a typical monitor, and that's what you get on your screen captured images. can HyperSnap capture images at 300 dpi resolution?Ī screen capture program like HyperSnap can only capture images at the resolution the screen displays them. The following was excerpted from this webpage: Is this process what you were referring to? I downloaded the free trial and couldn't make it fly. I figured I could then resize the huge 92dpi image to the smaller print size which would crank up the dpi in the process. At first I thought it may be able to pull it off by zooming in on a detail before the capture since it has the ability to Auto-scroll and concurrently captures long web pages and other documents, enabling it to grab more than is visible on the screen. RE: Non-White Paper Color TIF File from Drawing ctopher (Mechanical) 18 May 05 13:30 :-(Įven printing a pdf from the part screen instead of the drawing screen yields a white background. Printing as a pdf: Using a large format drawing sheet and printing to a pdf at a large paper size with image quality set to high yields a decent level of detail, but the background is still white. Saving as a pdf: I can't tell what the dpi is, but the level of detail is on par with the jpg. The print screen method is also dependent upon window size and your monitor's display settings and so therefore is seriously handicapped at porviding high quality images. It doesn't seem like you have any options to choose your desired level of detail or image size. Also depends upon window size and your monitor's display settings. Saving as a jpg: Unfortunately yields only 72 dpi. From my hunting it looks like in order to get a background color you have to print from the part or assembly window and then you have no control over image size or quality. It seems like any output from a drawing is going to yield a white background no matter what format you choose. Aside from the non-white background, a high dpi (like the 300 I listed) is absolutely neccessary in order to achieve an acceptable level of detail. This frame displays a preview of a picture you selected to appear on your stamp.Thanks for your rapid responses. If you clear this box, the image remains inside the stamp definition file, but when you preview or insert the stamp, the image is not there. Use this image…Ĭheck to use this image on the stamp. Only the text part (if any) remains inside the stamp definition file. Your stamp image then appears inside HyperSnap’s workspace, ready for editing with all the program’s tools. The stamp is saved and the Edit Stamp dialog closes. Edit ImageĬlick this button to edit the image currently selected for the stamp. This image will be used as the stamp’s background. From File…Ĭlick to select an image from a graphics file on disk. If a selection rectangle is visible on the workspace image, only the selected fragment will be used on the stamp, otherwise the entire image is used. Click this to use the image current in the HyperSnap workspace on this stamp.
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