Line at top and left when using Save As jpeg

P

Paddy

Publisher 2003: When I "Save As" JPEG, it creates lines at the edge of the
paper.

For Web (96dpi), there is no line.
For Desktop (150dpi), there is a line at the top edge and left edge.
For Commercial (300dpi), there is a line at the top edge.

The lines are not visible in a normal view. But, when you print the JPG
(reduced to fit within the printing margins), the lines appear on the paper;
and when you view the JPG at great magnification (e.g. in "Preview"), you can
see the lines.

Do you know what creates the lines, or, more important, how to get rid of
them? I convert many pages to JPEG, which are then printed by someone else.
Those lines cause a problem.
 
P

Paddy

If it were just three or four, I would concur; cropping would be fine.

But as I deal with many such pages each month, it would take much too long!


JoAnn Paules said:
I've seen the lines myself. I just use a little cropping to get rid of them.

--

JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"


Paddy said:
Publisher 2003: When I "Save As" JPEG, it creates lines at the edge of the
paper.

For Web (96dpi), there is no line.
For Desktop (150dpi), there is a line at the top edge and left edge.
For Commercial (300dpi), there is a line at the top edge.

The lines are not visible in a normal view. But, when you print the JPG
(reduced to fit within the printing margins), the lines appear on the
paper;
and when you view the JPG at great magnification (e.g. in "Preview"), you
can
see the lines.

Do you know what creates the lines, or, more important, how to get rid of
them? I convert many pages to JPEG, which are then printed by someone
else.
Those lines cause a problem.
 
J

JoAnn Paules

..PDF files won't work for what you're doing? (Just asking)

--

JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"


Paddy said:
If it were just three or four, I would concur; cropping would be fine.

But as I deal with many such pages each month, it would take much too
long!


JoAnn Paules said:
I've seen the lines myself. I just use a little cropping to get rid of
them.

--

JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"


Paddy said:
Publisher 2003: When I "Save As" JPEG, it creates lines at the edge of
the
paper.

For Web (96dpi), there is no line.
For Desktop (150dpi), there is a line at the top edge and left edge.
For Commercial (300dpi), there is a line at the top edge.

The lines are not visible in a normal view. But, when you print the JPG
(reduced to fit within the printing margins), the lines appear on the
paper;
and when you view the JPG at great magnification (e.g. in "Preview"),
you
can
see the lines.

Do you know what creates the lines, or, more important, how to get rid
of
them? I convert many pages to JPEG, which are then printed by someone
else.
Those lines cause a problem.
 
J

John Inzer

Paddy said:
Publisher 2003: When I "Save As" JPEG, it creates lines at the edge
of the paper.

For Web (96dpi), there is no line.
For Desktop (150dpi), there is a line at the top edge and left edge.
For Commercial (300dpi), there is a line at the top edge.

The lines are not visible in a normal view. But, when you print the
JPG (reduced to fit within the printing margins), the lines appear on
the paper; and when you view the JPG at great magnification (e.g. in
"Preview"), you can see the lines.

Do you know what creates the lines, or, more important, how to get
rid of them? I convert many pages to JPEG, which are then printed by
someone else. Those lines cause a problem.
===========================================
Instead of going to...File / Save As / JPEG...

One alternative might be to go to...
Edit/Select all or...Ctrl+A...

Right click the selected group and choose:
Save As Picture / JPEG.

--

John Inzer MS-MVP
Digital Media Experience

Notice
This is not tech support
I am a volunteer

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you

Proceed at your own risk
 
P

Paddy

Thanks for the idea.

No, PDF won't do. The Publisher pages have to be mixed in with other pages
in a document, and this is the only way that I know to save Publisher pages
in a format that a document can use.

JoAnn Paules said:
..PDF files won't work for what you're doing? (Just asking)

--

JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"


Paddy said:
If it were just three or four, I would concur; cropping would be fine.

But as I deal with many such pages each month, it would take much too
long!


JoAnn Paules said:
I've seen the lines myself. I just use a little cropping to get rid of
them.

--

JoAnn Paules
MVP Microsoft [Publisher]
Tech Editor for "Microsoft Publisher 2007 For Dummies"


Publisher 2003: When I "Save As" JPEG, it creates lines at the edge of
the
paper.

For Web (96dpi), there is no line.
For Desktop (150dpi), there is a line at the top edge and left edge.
For Commercial (300dpi), there is a line at the top edge.

The lines are not visible in a normal view. But, when you print the JPG
(reduced to fit within the printing margins), the lines appear on the
paper;
and when you view the JPG at great magnification (e.g. in "Preview"),
you
can
see the lines.

Do you know what creates the lines, or, more important, how to get rid
of
them? I convert many pages to JPEG, which are then printed by someone
else.
Those lines cause a problem.
 
P

Paddy

John Inzer said:
===========================================
Instead of going to...File / Save As / JPEG...

One alternative might be to go to...
Edit/Select all or...Ctrl+A...

Right click the selected group and choose:
Save As Picture / JPEG.

--

John Inzer MS-MVP
Digital Media Experience

Notice
This is not tech support
I am a volunteer

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you

Proceed at your own risk

That's a nice idea. It's more work, unfortunately, but I've tested it and it
works. Thanks. If I don't find a better way around it, I'll use this method.
 
J

John Inzer

Paddy said:
That's a nice idea. It's more work, unfortunately, but I've tested it
and it works. Thanks. If I don't find a better way around it, I'll
use this method.
===========================
You're welcome.

--

John Inzer MS-MVP
Digital Media Experience

Notice
This is not tech support
I am a volunteer

Solutions that work for
me may not work for you

Proceed at your own risk
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top