![]() ![]() I don't have Reader installed here so I'm not sure but I know there are font rendering options there. (Preferences > Page Display > Rendering). One thing to check is Readers rending preferences to see if anything there is affecting the quality. If this is destined for print you shouldn't need to worry about it, the issue is a screen display problem that won't translate to a printer. This may be due to you scaling the image in OpenOffice or just due to Reader basing its scale on the physical dimensions of the PDF not the pixel dimensions of the image inside that PDF. Your image is made up of pixels, if you scale your image by any non-integer amount those pixels don't align with the new scale and you get those jagged edges (aliasing), which are especially noticeable on thin lines.Īt a guess, the 140% zoom in Reader is probably showing your image at 100% (or some integer scale) in regards to the images actual pixel size and your display. It's physically impossible for any image to render perfectly at any scale. ![]() The problem is how Adobe Reader is rendering your image. OpenOffice may be resampling or compressing your image, but if it looks as it should at a higher zoom level then I assume that's not the problem. If your image looks as it should when you zoom in there is nothing wrong with your image.
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