Does that help?
Great trick! I experimented and was surprised to discover the background
image and elements from the Master Slide were included in the copy-paste.
The issue is .png images with transparency, they are converted to have an
opaque background. The other issue is grouped elemented, in that additional
opaque elements are created - but these opaque masks are separate elements
and can be deleted. The last issue is that anything that is orginally a
raster image (imported .jpg or .png) are still raster and not resizable
without altering quality.
I will do a bit more playing with this nifty idea and it will eventually
show up on the blog.
--
- Troy Chollar
- TLC Creative Services, Inc.
- A MS PowerPoint MVP
- Host of www.ThePowerPointBlog.com
"Glen" <Gl...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:75101BCD-8D55-4833...@microsoft.com...
File, Save As
Choose EMF or WMF in the Files of type dropdown
Give the file a name and save it
In other cases, you can print the slide to a PS printer driver, choose "To File"
in the print dialog box, then import the resulting PS into CorelDraw using the
Interpreted PS filter.
-----------------------------------------
Steve Rindsberg, PPT MVP
PPT FAQ: www.pptfaq.com
PPTools: www.pptools.com
================================================
My next suggestion would be to print to PDF at print quality; however once
again png files with transparency are not compatable... one downfall of the
trusted png file.
Possible solution for high quality copies of slide: change page set up to a
extremely lareg size (make sure you use exact page ratio). Then export image
files. This ofcourse will not be vector.
I use PPT for print all the time an avoid PNG transparencies for this
reason, I embed .eps; of course these look like crap in onscreen
presentations.
and then open in vector program.
--
It''s cold up here in Toronto
No neeed ... we share, we learn. ;-)
>I have not tested the emf wmf suggestion... however I
> expect it will have similar issues with png files (with transparencies).
And I suspect you're right.
> My next suggestion would be to print to PDF at print quality; however once
> again png files with transparency are not compatable... one downfall of the
> trusted png file.
Yep, because while PDF has some support for transparency, most apps that
generate PDF or PS --> PDF don't take advantage of it and resort to ugly
single-pixel image workarounds or drop back to 1-bit transparency instead of
PNG's 8-bit alpha transparency.
Or the short version: yeah. You're right. ;-)
> Possible solution for high quality copies of slide: change page set up to a
> extremely lareg size (make sure you use exact page ratio). Then export image
> files. This ofcourse will not be vector.
There are some other tricks for getting high rez bitmaps out of PPT w/o having
to resize the slide:
Improve PowerPoint's GIF, BMP, PNG, JPG export resolution
http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00052.htm
I'll have to try your notes page image idea though ... that's one I haven't
played with.
Another would be to copy the slide from the slide sorter view and paste that
into e.g. Draw.
> I use PPT for print all the time an avoid PNG transparencies for this
> reason, I embed .eps; of course these look like crap in onscreen
> presentations.
>
> and then open in vector program.
>
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