T
Thilo Ernst
Hi folks,
Just to save you all some trouble:
Acrobat distiller, even recent versions of it, is unable to render
semi-transparent fills correctly. The PDF format supports transparency
from version 1.4 (Acrobat 5) on, but Distiller generates PDF using
PostScript as an intermediate format and transparency is unknown to PS.
A good way to convert a PPT figure containg transparent objects into a
..pdf is generating a bitmap first (thus enforcing transparency flattening),
inserting this bitmap into a new PPT or Word document, and then invoking Distiller.
Of course for this to have an acceptable look, the bitmap should have as
high a resolution as possible.
Now Powerpoint (at least the version I use) does export bitmaps, but offers
no way of explicitly adjusting the resolution of the image.
I just found out that PPT uses the page size to determine the resolution
of the image. The program seems to assume some fixed dpi value to do this.
So simply increase your page size to insane values in "File-> Page Setup",
use "Save as ... GIF" or something along these lines and voila,
you get huge bitmaps consuming vast amounts of disk space but
looking real nice when converted to PDF and printed.
In case you need a bitmap format not supported by PPT, I recommend
using IrfanView (www.irfanview.com). It supports tons of formats,
does some manipulations and, best of all, accepts drag-and-drop of
graphics objects from Powerpoint (thanks to my lovely wife for this
hint . In this case, the PPT page size is significant as well,
and the drag-and-drop should start from the single-slide view,
not the slides overview. The viewing Zoom selected in PPT does not
influence the size of the generated bitmap though.
HTH,
TE
Just to save you all some trouble:
Acrobat distiller, even recent versions of it, is unable to render
semi-transparent fills correctly. The PDF format supports transparency
from version 1.4 (Acrobat 5) on, but Distiller generates PDF using
PostScript as an intermediate format and transparency is unknown to PS.
A good way to convert a PPT figure containg transparent objects into a
..pdf is generating a bitmap first (thus enforcing transparency flattening),
inserting this bitmap into a new PPT or Word document, and then invoking Distiller.
Of course for this to have an acceptable look, the bitmap should have as
high a resolution as possible.
Now Powerpoint (at least the version I use) does export bitmaps, but offers
no way of explicitly adjusting the resolution of the image.
I just found out that PPT uses the page size to determine the resolution
of the image. The program seems to assume some fixed dpi value to do this.
So simply increase your page size to insane values in "File-> Page Setup",
use "Save as ... GIF" or something along these lines and voila,
you get huge bitmaps consuming vast amounts of disk space but
looking real nice when converted to PDF and printed.
In case you need a bitmap format not supported by PPT, I recommend
using IrfanView (www.irfanview.com). It supports tons of formats,
does some manipulations and, best of all, accepts drag-and-drop of
graphics objects from Powerpoint (thanks to my lovely wife for this
hint . In this case, the PPT page size is significant as well,
and the drag-and-drop should start from the single-slide view,
not the slides overview. The viewing Zoom selected in PPT does not
influence the size of the generated bitmap though.
HTH,
TE