Picture Sizing - What's 'Best Practice'?
Feb 28, 2012
By
Dave Newgass
Hello,
What would be considered 'best practice' when inserting an image.....
- Insert an image of the EXACT size you need it to be? (This may involve dropping a pic in a slide, re-sizing it, make a note of the size, deleting, pick you favorite graphic editor, re-size, re-save, re-insert.
Or
- Insert an image and re-size as needed and be done with it.
You can tell which way I want you to go on this.....but in reality, in order to have the most optimal presentation size, am I ok to drop a pic in and fiddle with the size from within Power Point?
What are your thoughts and opinions?
Cheers,
Dave
19 Replies
I believe in sizing images outside of PowerPoint. It makes for a much smaller and more compact presentation. PowerPoint does not re-sample the image so when you put a larger image in there and scale, it's still a large file size. Our instructors are bad about dropping 8+mpx images in presentations and then getting frustrated when they have a 200mb presentation. I've cut several presentations in size by 75% with no loss in quality simply by resizing the images properly.
Hey Rich,
Thanks for dropping in on this.....it's not what I wanted to hear really but in reality I think I already knew this. I was hoping for 'the easy' way.
Cheers,
Dave
Dave,
Rich is 100% on the money. I typically will use something like Gimp, Fireworks or some other app to resize the images and then import them into Power Point.
Thanks.....
I just downloaded GIMP a couple days ago. I now have a new 'best practice'.
Thanks for the help!
-Dave
While I do use Photoshop to edit my images outside of PowerPoint, as a best practice, I still use PowerPoint to edit the image size also. I just make sure the image is around 960x720 max for width and height when importing. This is because if you make the image too small outside of PowerPoint, and you resize it larger in PowerPoint after importing, it will become grainy (unless it's a vector image).
You just want to make sure you're not importing images at a huge resolution. If you stick to the slide size, no one should have any issues playing your course at all.
Hi, Dave.
This is definitely a struggle from a time investment standpoint, but from a storage and bandwidth stanpoint you should always optimize your images. This is true whether you're talking about elearning, web design, epublishing, e-whatever.
Depending on your delivery method, unoptimized images create delays and system strain (Flash needing to pre-load the image, or HTML displaying the image line-by-line as it loads).
A colleague of mine was recently complaining that an image was taking way too long to load. I took a look at the image - it was being displayed on the page at 320x240 but the actual file was 1280x960. Resizing it to the actual display size and saving it as a jpg instead of a png moved it from 2.7mb to something like 48kb. I'm not great with math, but isn't that something like a 98% difference? As a result, the image now loads instantly
Optimizing an image manually should take less than a minute. I realize that if you've got 100 images to do then it adds up, but it's well worth it in the end.
Also, there are many ways to batch edit a bunch of images outside of ppt. If all you need to do is make a lot of images say...720px wide or smaller, doing it one at a time can be a real pain.
I typically use batch edits (Fireworks for Photoshop) to get all of my images close to the size that I'm going to want them at and then tweak them a little once they are in PowerPoint.
Dave,
If you're in a jam and find that you've already inserted a number of images, you can also have PowerPoint do some compression for you. Maybe not as ideal of a solution, but can be effective to reduce the overall file sizes.
Yes, I was going to make the same suggestion as Mike. When the compress pictures dialog box opens you can choose to do just the selected picture or all pictures.
Otherwise, I use Snagit for batch file "operations."
Curious, has anyone compared ultimate file size when sizing pictures OUTSIDE of PowerPoint ahead of time vs. compressing within PowerPoint?
You made me curious so I just did a little experiment.
I used an image that is 1920x1200 @96dpi with a file size of 545K.
I made two single slide presentations. In one I inserted the image as it was and used the compression feature in PowerPoint. In the other I did a simple resize with the MS Office Picture Manager.
The result:
Presentation using PowerPoint Compression = 235K
Presentation using resized image = 171K
So if my math is right, in this instance that's a 24% difference. Now, this is just a single image so of course, mileage will vary.
Also as I understand it, it makes a difference if you select "insert image" on the ribbon instead of just dragging and dropping an image from windows explorer directly onto the .ppt slide.
Hmmm....interesting!
I just opened PP2010 and checked out he compress images but for some reason I don't see any option to select 'all' so to speak. I tried to uncheck the option 'Apply to this picture only' and it didn't help much.
Any thoughts or direction would be appreciated!
Cheers,
Dave
Hi Dave,
Not sure what happened, but when you uncheck "Apply to this picture only", PowerPoint should apply compression to all the photos in the presentation.Here's a Microsoft link for Office 2010.
http://bit.ly/xPB0Kd
I used the screen quality compression settings in PPT, assuming this would be used for an elearning application. In side of picture manager I just did a simple standard resize.
I recently wrote a blog article about Optimizing Graphics for eLearning Projects Maybe it will be helpful! http://bit.ly/y2O0VI
Very helpful thread. I'm trying to find a way to optimize images for Storyline on my Windows computer where my Storyline is - my Photoshop and Fireworks are on my Mac. Frustrating.
I was just having a conversation with two colleagues the other day. A coworker was asking me why her Storyline lessons were sometimes twice as large as the ones I did even though my lessons were often longer. The true answer, once I thought it through and checked things out, was that she was inserting more videos than I. However, in the mean time I did think about how I play with images and did a bunch of tests with one sample image. Apologize ahead of time if it makes this too long, but some people may find it useful.
First thing I tested was with images from clipart.com:
The second thing I thought of was that I often make "custom gradient" backgrounds within Storyline as compared to using an image (not for everything, but probably for about half the slides):
The other thing I do if I want an image with font over it is to play with it in Powerpoint, but then paste into Storyline (probably an accessibility no-no):
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