After exporting the images, you can see how they look by opening them in Fireworks.
You'll notice the following:
The following tables indicate how the final images differ from the original JPEG files that the digital camera created:
| Original digital camera files | ||
|---|---|---|
| Filename | File dimensions | File size |
|
1013.jpg |
1679 x 1170 pixels |
402K |
|
1088.jpg |
2920 x 1876 pixels |
1732K |
|
1095.jpg |
2063 x 1444 pixels |
753K |
|
1111.jpg |
3040 x 1840 pixels |
2831K |
|
1320.jpg |
3284 x 1855 pixels |
1364K |
|
1396.jpg |
3346 x 2000 pixels |
1435K |
| Final images | ||
|---|---|---|
| Filename | File dimensions | File size |
|
Image0 |
700 x 150 pixels |
12K |
|
Image1 |
700 x 150 pixels |
16K |
|
Image2 |
700 x 150 pixels |
23K |
|
Image3 |
700 x 150 pixels |
19K |
|
Image4 |
700 x 150 pixels |
21K |
|
Image5 |
700 x 150 pixels |
14K |
The final images have the uniform dimensions you need and have much smaller file sizes, which is critical for public websites.
In this tutorial, you learned to batch process large images files, create and name frames, place images on frames, and to preview and export files. For detailed information about any of the features covered in this tutorial, and for information on additional Fireworks features, see Using Fireworks.
RSS feed | Send me an e-mail when comments are added to this page | Comment Report
Current page: http://livedocs.adobe.com/fireworks/8/fwhelp/gs_04_p8.htm
Comments
No screen name said on Feb 5, 2006 at 9:04 PM :