Ah,
What a shame that you're right! I did a test scan to see if it was how the programme interpreted the empty space in the image, and lo, it worked properly--so I have to find the offending images.
Can the "fix dpi" option when I start a new project fix it, or do I need to find the images by hand?
Thanks again,
-Feliks
White Margins
Moderator: peterZ
Re: White Margins
It may or may not flag those pages as needing to be fixed. It's usually easy to spot unusual pixel sizes though. Still, I believe the method I suggested previously would be easier.feliks wrote:Can the "fix dpi" option when I start a new project fix it, or do I need to find the images by hand?
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: White Margins
'morning,
Too late, re-started, forced ST to "fix" all dpi, and lo, we were in business. Curious, though, because although it was a "scan by hand" using a Brother scanner, I didn't change any of the settings--everything was set to 600 dpi grayscale scanning. Strange that the DPI should get mucked up.
Anyway, thanks again!
-F
Too late, re-started, forced ST to "fix" all dpi, and lo, we were in business. Curious, though, because although it was a "scan by hand" using a Brother scanner, I didn't change any of the settings--everything was set to 600 dpi grayscale scanning. Strange that the DPI should get mucked up.
Anyway, thanks again!
-F
Re: White Margins
This often happens when you post-process scans in 3rd party image editing software.feliks wrote:Curious, though, because although it was a "scan by hand" using a Brother scanner, I didn't change any of the settings--everything was set to 600 dpi grayscale scanning. Strange that the DPI should get mucked up.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.