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HELP SAVING AS A PDF

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HELP SAVING AS A PDF NikkiParker 12 Jan 05:59
  HELP SAVING AS A PDF Steve Kinney 12 Jan 07:54
   HELP SAVING AS A PDF Chris Mohler 12 Jan 15:55
    HELP SAVING AS A PDF Paul Saumane 12 Jan 16:21
2013-01-12 05:59:45 UTC (about 12 years ago)
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1

HELP SAVING AS A PDF

Hi,

I need to help with saving my GIMP as a PDF. When I save as a PDF it does not save CORRECTLY as it appears in GIMP. Picture of how it's saving below is shown in GIMP and PDF

[IMG]http://i47.tinypic.com/23kw8pz.jpg[/IMG]

[img]http://oi50.tinypic.com/o0ov7t.jpg[/img]

Steve Kinney
2013-01-12 07:54:51 UTC (about 12 years ago)

HELP SAVING AS A PDF

On 01/12/2013 12:59 AM, NikkiParker wrote:

Hi,

I need to help with saving my GIMP as a PDF. When I save as a PDF it does not save CORRECTLY as it appears in GIMP. Picture of how it's saving below is shown in GIMP and PDF

[IMG]http://i47.tinypic.com/23kw8pz.jpg[/IMG]

[img]http://oi50.tinypic.com/o0ov7t.jpg[/img]

Ouch. It has been a long time since I tried to export a PDF from the GIMP and since then things may have changed - but back then, I gave up and I don't think the GIMP is the right tool for this kind of job - making bitmap images that will end up in PDF files, yes, but making whole PDF files, with text and line art, not so much.

Inkscape, a vector editor, is probably the right tool for the job at hand. You could export your design from the GIMP in any common image format, import it into Inkscape, and use it as a guide to rebuild your image as a vector graphic file. This source file's "native format" would be SVG, Scalable Vector Graphic. Inkscape can export vector files as EPS, Encapsulated Postscript, which is often preferred for applications like label printing, and as PDF, which would meet your specification exactly.

The major advantage of Inkscape, other than it "just works" for the purpose in question, is that logos and other art created in vector formats can be scaled to any size without loss of resolution and re-used in many contexts.

There is also a "quick and dirty" method - quick because almost no learning curve, dirty because the result will be a "fake PDF" that's really just a container for a bitmap image. But it might meet your immediate requirement: Take note of the desired display dimensions of your image, and save is as a PNG. Open a new Libre Office or Open Office word processor document, drop your image in, and format the page to be the same size as your finished image. Export as PDF and viola. I was not certain this would work so I grabbed a random image and tried it. Results here:

http://pilobilus.net/xfer/demo.pdf

:o)

Steve

Chris Mohler
2013-01-12 15:55:26 UTC (about 12 years ago)

HELP SAVING AS A PDF

On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 1:54 AM, Steve Kinney wrote:

There is also a "quick and dirty" method

Another:

1. Image->Flatten Image

2. Export PDF

Agreed that Inkscape is the better choice for this type of layout.

Chris

Paul Saumane
2013-01-12 16:21:20 UTC (about 12 years ago)

HELP SAVING AS A PDF

There is another possibility too which is to use the "LyX" after converting under png or jpg, being noted that the jpg gives a lighter result in term of document weight. LyX is not so easy to masterized but far more easy in handling the picture parameters.

Paul

-----Message d'origine----- From: Chris Mohler
Sent: Saturday, January 12, 2013 4:55 PM To: Steve Kinney
Cc: gimp-user-list@gnome.org
Subject: Re: [Gimp-user] HELP SAVING AS A PDF

On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 1:54 AM, Steve Kinney wrote:

There is also a "quick and dirty" method

Another:

1. Image->Flatten Image

2. Export PDF

Agreed that Inkscape is the better choice for this type of layout.

Chris