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GIMP - Printable Version +- Gimp-Forum.net (https://www.gimp-forum.net) +-- Forum: GIMP (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-GIMP) +--- Forum: General questions (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-General-questions) +--- Thread: GIMP (/Thread-GIMP) |
GIMP - azar - 03-06-2025 HELLO I will try to explain my problem. I want to turn an image into a poster with custom dimensions, so I wanted to use GIMP’s guides and crop the image following the guides. The thing I don’t understand is that nothing matches when I put them in the image: the image size, the guides, etc. I have an image that is 63×83 cm. I set my margins in cm based on the image scale, but they should be much smaller. Instead, they are still set to 1 cm. And when I go to Image > Image Size and Dimensions, I get another size entirely. THANK IMAGE RE: GIMP - Ofnuts - 03-06-2025 Start here: https://www.gimp-forum.net/Thread-Image-size-in-Gimp Also, don't confuse the Rectangle select ( ![]() ![]() RE: GIMP - azar - 03-06-2025 thank but I looked at the information from the link, but it's too complicated for me What I wanted to do was a poster like Posteriza, an image split across multiple sheets. I wanted to try it with GIMP like this. Manual Method with GIMP If you prefer to do everything in GIMP: Open your image. Resize it to the desired total size (Image > Scale Image). Create guides to divide the image: Go to Image > Guides > New Guide (by percent). Add vertical and horizontal guides to split the image into multiple parts. Cut the image into sections: Select an area using the rectangular selection tool (following the guides). Copy and paste into a new image (Ctrl + Shift + V), then save as PDF or PNG. Print each section separately and assemble the sheets. It's just that with the guides, I can't set it to A4 format (210 × 297 mm) merci RE: GIMP - Ofnuts - 03-06-2025 (Yesterday, 07:12 PM)azar Wrote: thank but I looked at the information from the link, but it's too complicated for me When you copy-paste to a new image, you copy-paste pixels not centimeters. What size the pixels have in the target image depends on that image print definition. It could be better to do Image > Duplicate (so that you copy pixels and print definition together) , and crop that duplicate to the part your want to print. Technically you cannot print a full A4 size on A4 paper. Printers have margins (on inkjets this is often about 1cm at the bottom) and usually by default the print driver with scale/shrink the image to fit the printable area. If you want a seamless result, you use the technique used for wallpaper strips:
RE: GIMP - rich2005 - 03-06-2025 Gimp works in pixels, and that information is hidden in your screenshot by the window icons. That will determine the final quality. (1) There is a script-fu that will place a guide using "real-world" units. Only one guide at a time, use multiples of 21 cm and 29.7 and build up the grid for Image -> Slice using Guides. The script shows in the Image -> Guides -> New Guide (by unit) (attached, unzip and put in your scripts folder) (2) Another option is the Rectangular Selection tool with the aspect ratio set to 1:1.414 Make selection then Image -> Guides -> New Guides from Selection. Move the selection around and build up the grid of guides. [attachment=13156] RE: GIMP - azar - 03-06-2025 merci Thank you for all this information |