White Margins
Moderator: peterZ
White Margins
In Scan Tailor, I've been using the output color/grayscale with white margins (my images are pages of photo albums and scrapbooks). And then I see that I can remove the layer of white in Gimp...I like this because then when I convert the images to pdf, there is only a very small white bleed around the edges and this suites my purpose best. However, this is VERY tedious...Is there an easier way? Or any advise on what I can use and how I can remove the back (white) layer in batch processing instead of one at a time? Thank you!
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- Posts: 596
- Joined: 06 Jun 2009, 23:57
Re: White Margins
Why not just set the margins to zero when you're processing the images in Scan Tailor?
Re: White Margins
Or you could use the Mixed output mode instead of Color / Grayscale.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: White Margins
I tried the zero margins...can you look at the attached (first few pages of the book)? The cover of my book is larger than the other pages, and the zero margin looks great for this page - has very little white around it. But the images on the other pages are smaller and there is more white border. I selected zero margins for all pages. I wish my smaller images would enlarge to fill most of the page...but I guess that would distort my images. I haven't tried making the select content of the larger pages smaller so that they will be closer to the same size...
I don't really understand mixed mode...haven't been able to figure it out yet, except I figured out how to do a little with fill zones. Wish there were a tutorial or video so I wouldn't feel so dumb!
I don't really understand mixed mode...haven't been able to figure it out yet, except I figured out how to do a little with fill zones. Wish there were a tutorial or video so I wouldn't feel so dumb!
- Attachments
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- dad navy 5-18 zero margins.pdf
- (3.03 MiB) Downloaded 727 times
Re: White Margins
Uncheck "Match size with other pages" on the Margins stage.Rhea27 wrote:zero margin looks great for this page - has very little white around it. But the images on the other pages are smaller and there is more white border.
Never mind - it's not meant for dark background like yours.Rhea27 wrote:I don't really understand mixed mode...
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: White Margins
I'm not certain if this was addressed elsewhere, re: margins. Please excuse me if this is the same question as posted previously.
Situation:
I have an old book that I recently scanned by hand. I then:
1. Split the pages:
2. Select the content:
3. Set the margins:
4. And then verify my output (thumbnail image):
As you can see in the output, the size of the page is all wrong--too much white, as has been discussed here and elsewhere. I've tried to uncheck "match size with other pages," but then I get all sorts of oddly sized outputs. I've tried making my first page the "right" size, but I can't get others to match to it. I have both the latest vanilla ST as well as the ST: Enhanced version.
Any tips?
Thanks!
-Feliks
Situation:
I have an old book that I recently scanned by hand. I then:
1. Split the pages:
2. Select the content:
3. Set the margins:
4. And then verify my output (thumbnail image):
As you can see in the output, the size of the page is all wrong--too much white, as has been discussed here and elsewhere. I've tried to uncheck "match size with other pages," but then I get all sorts of oddly sized outputs. I've tried making my first page the "right" size, but I can't get others to match to it. I have both the latest vanilla ST as well as the ST: Enhanced version.
Any tips?
Thanks!
-Feliks
Re: White Margins
If it's only the first (cover?) page causing others to grow, just uncheck "Match size with other pages" for it (not for others).
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: White Margins
First off, thanks for being amazing and helping out all the time.
So, the issue persists. I've adjusted the content of my first page so that with margins, it is the "ideal" page. However, even unchecked, the rest of the pages grow. Is there a way to make the other pages "follow" the first page's size?
01. My margin setup:
02. The output, "grown pages," result:
Suggestions? It's probably something easy/obvious, but I'm missing it.
Cheers!
-Feliks
So, the issue persists. I've adjusted the content of my first page so that with margins, it is the "ideal" page. However, even unchecked, the rest of the pages grow. Is there a way to make the other pages "follow" the first page's size?
01. My margin setup:
02. The output, "grown pages," result:
Suggestions? It's probably something easy/obvious, but I'm missing it.
Cheers!
-Feliks
Re: White Margins
This means some of your pages have wrong DPI. Hopefully there are just a few of those, otherwise it's going to be a pain fixing them.
So, the way to locate those pages is to sort by increasing width or height (see a drop-down list at bottom right), then start removing pages from the back of the list, until margins of other pages normalize. Then you would re-insert the pages you removed one by one, with correct DPI.
So, the way to locate those pages is to sort by increasing width or height (see a drop-down list at bottom right), then start removing pages from the back of the list, until margins of other pages normalize. Then you would re-insert the pages you removed one by one, with correct DPI.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.