This page describes basic scanning. It is possible to modify the image as you scan it or after you scan it. Modifying images is fun, but can require large amounts of time to get it right. This is not discussed here. Hundreds of books have been written about this. Tech support will provide further instructions. In Adobe Photoshop, pull down the "File" menu to "Import" and then slide the mouse to the right and pull the "Import" menu down to "ScanWizard PPC3.0.6" The following two windows will appear
Before you scan images, check the following in the Settings Window
There are many other settings. If you need to adjust the brightness or colors of an image, the technical support staff can assist you. The Preview Window In this window, you can set the scan area. Just drag an edge or corner of the dashed rectangle. When the scan region is selected, hit "Preview" to be sure the area is correct, or "Scan" to scan the image and return to Photoshop.
Click and drag to outline part of the picture that you want. You may modify this region after it has been selected by dragging one of the corners.
When you are ready to crop, move the mouse to the center of the region selected (the cursor will change to scissors as shown below) and click.
Here is the cropped image.
Type in the desired width or height. Changing the width will change the height and vice-verse.
Use encapsulated postscript if you want to include the image in a paper. You will be asked to select preview information. This depends on how you will use the image. Contact Tech Support for more information.
Use jpeg if you want to include the image in a web page - All images in this document were saved using maximum quality.
Use tiff if you want to convert the image to another format. Use Macintosh Byte ordering for tiff documents.
Before you save the image, you may want to adjust the resolution to reduce the amount of disk space that is required. To reduce the resolution, pull down the "Image" menu to "Image Size ...". Enter the new resolution.
Decreasing the resolution may decrease the quality of the image. For images included into web pages, decrease the resolution. The decrease in quality will not be noticed and the file size will decrease considerably.
For example, the house, pictured here, was scanned from a 4in x 6in photograph at 300 pixels per inch. It took 8 minutes to scan and required 8.7 MB of disk space. It was saved as a jpeg image with resolution of 100 pixels per inch and requires about 100K of disk space.
Here are some file sizes of this image.
| Resolution | TIFF | Encapsulated Postscript | JPEG |
|---|---|---|---|
| 300 pixels/in | 8.7M | 528K | 776K |
| 100 pixels/in | 1.0M | 83K | 116K |
To save the image, pull down the "File" menu to "Save" or to "Save As..." You will see the following
Click and drag the mouse on the box to the right of "Format:" to change the format. Name the file and click "Save"