jaggies after rotating

BO
Posted By
Bobby Owsinski
Apr 23, 2005
Views
344
Replies
5
Status
Closed
When I rotate of graphic I get the jaggies. How can I correct this?


Bobby

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H
Hecate
Apr 23, 2005
On Sat, 23 Apr 2005 22:54:39 GMT, Bobby Owsinski
wrote:

When I rotate of graphic I get the jaggies. How can I correct this?

Don’t rotate them at anything other than 90 or 180 degrees. Or other ways, but as you don’t tell us what type of image i.e. the file type, who knows? <shrug>



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E
eastside
Apr 24, 2005
If it’s a scanned image that needs a correction rotation not an integral of 90 degrees, rescan with the film frame rotated to the corrected orientation.

Dane

When I rotate of graphic I get the jaggies. How can I correct this?

Don’t rotate them at anything other than 90 or 180 degrees. Or other ways, but as you don’t tell us what type of image i.e. the file type, who knows? <shrug>



Hecate – The Real One

Fashion: Buying things you don’t need, with money
you don’t have, to impress people you don’t like…
BO
Bobby Owsinski
Apr 24, 2005
In article
<0LCae.634556$>,
"Eastside" wrote:

If it’s a scanned image that needs a correction rotation not an integral of 90 degrees, rescan with the film frame rotated to the corrected orientation.
Dane

It’s not a scanned graphic. Just a jpeg that needs to be at something other than 90 degrees.


Bobby
M
MorituriMax
Apr 24, 2005
"Bobby Owsinski" wrote in message
In article
<0LCae.634556$>,
"Eastside" wrote:

If it’s a scanned image that needs a correction rotation not an integral of
90 degrees, rescan with the film frame rotated to the corrected orientation.

Dane

It’s not a scanned graphic. Just a jpeg that needs to be at something other than 90 degrees.

Any way to use the original jpeg and make a vector version of it?
J
jscheimpflug
Apr 24, 2005
"Bobby Owsinski" wrote in message

It’s not a scanned graphic. Just a jpeg that needs to be at something other than 90 degrees.

I’m going to guess that it’s about 1.2 degrees off the horizontal, which is so typical I have to wonder if there’s not some ergonomic issue with many digital cameras. In any event, you would be better off to rescan it to be level, and best to your target size.

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