Jokes5 mins ago
print a pic in black and white
5 Answers
can anyone help me its doing my head in
im on my laptop its got xp home edition i want to print out a picture of my motorbike thats in colour
but i want it in black and white
any ideas
im on my laptop its got xp home edition i want to print out a picture of my motorbike thats in colour
but i want it in black and white
any ideas
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by gsxr1100tony. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Just in case the previous post isn't clear to you, the word you're looking for, somewhere on your screen, is probably 'Greyscale'.
If you simply want to print the picture in B&W (rather than saving it in this form), go to File > Print. (Don't just click on the 'Print' button as this usually bypasses the advanced print settings). What you see will depend upon the type of printer you're using but it's usually necessary to click on 'Properties'. Then select 'Greyscale printing'.
If you actually want to save the picture as a B&W file, most image viewing and manipulation programs offer 'Convert to Greyscale'. This is usually accessed from either the 'Edit' menu or the 'Image' one. Once you've changed the picture to B&W, select 'Save As' from the file menu and choose a new file name (so that you don't overwrite the original colour file).
Chris
If you simply want to print the picture in B&W (rather than saving it in this form), go to File > Print. (Don't just click on the 'Print' button as this usually bypasses the advanced print settings). What you see will depend upon the type of printer you're using but it's usually necessary to click on 'Properties'. Then select 'Greyscale printing'.
If you actually want to save the picture as a B&W file, most image viewing and manipulation programs offer 'Convert to Greyscale'. This is usually accessed from either the 'Edit' menu or the 'Image' one. Once you've changed the picture to B&W, select 'Save As' from the file menu and choose a new file name (so that you don't overwrite the original colour file).
Chris
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