the default for scanimage is 75dpi, and that is barely readable. i'll certainly give your gimp setting change a try.
but, can i also do this in the shell? can i take an image scanned with --resolution=150, funnel it through another utility (or two) and end up with a pdf containing 8.5x11" hi-res pages? what i do now when i need a print from a scanned image: convert filename.pgm filename.ps ps2pdf filename.ps with anything larger than 75dpi, the pdf is junk. i can add the -resize option to convert, and that helps, but not much. the document is still hard to read. On Fri, Dec 19, 2008 at 10:51 AM, m. allan noah <kitno455 at gmail.com> wrote: > The gimp probably defaults images to something like 72dpi. if you have > scanned at a higher dpi, it wont know, and will print it huge. just > change the print dpi in the gimp to match that at which you scanned. > look in the image->print size menu option > > allan > > On Fri, Dec 19, 2008 at 11:34 AM, gobo <gobo770 at gmail.com> wrote: >> for some time now i've been using homemade scripts with scanimage and >> scanadf to scan my paper documents. most of my documents are plain >> text. the results have always been poor and marginally acceptable. i'm >> using suse 10.3 and an hp aio j6450 or psc1210xi. >> >> recently i obtained a canon scanner w/adf for use at work where i must >> use windows. to get around the image compatibility issues of microsoft >> document imaging (office 2003) i simply print the scanned image to pdf >> with acrobat. the results obtained with mdi are far superior to >> anything i've ever been able to achieve with sane apps. >> >> i've spent hours fumbling around with scanimage options, imagemagick >> convert to resize the images and ps2pdf to produce the pdf files. >> while i have made some slight improvements over the default settings, >> i've never been able to get even close to the mdi output. in the few >> places where i must have a good scan, i use resolutions of 150 or 300, >> but to get prints of the image becomes a real pain. i must load the >> image in gimp, fiddle around resizing it and then printing. >> >> >> my standard scanimage script would contain: >> scanimage -x 215.9 -y 297 -d >> hpaio:/net/Officejet_J6400_series?ip=192.168.1.103 \ >> -pv --mode gray > $FILE >> >> >> pieces from a perl script using the adf: >> # this is the scan device >> @scanr = ("hpaio:/net/Officejet_J6400_series?ip=192.168.1.103"); >> # these are the command line options for scanadf >> @opts = ("-x 215.9 -y 297 -v --mode=gray --source ADF --batch-scan=no -e 1"); >> >> # scan page >> system("scanadf @opts -d @scanr -o $fnamepg"); >> >> adding --resolution=150, or 300 does produce a larger image, with less >> artifacting, and much more readable, but difficult to print. >> >> the answer must be one of two things -- either i'm missing something >> real simple about producing hi-res 8.5x11" images (that is right in >> front of my nose) or we are just not there yet with linux scanning. >> >> can someone correct, or put me on a better path? >> >> thanks. >> >> -- >> sane-devel mailing list: sane-devel at lists.alioth.debian.org >> http://lists.alioth.debian.org/mailman/listinfo/sane-devel >> Unsubscribe: Send mail with subject "unsubscribe your_password" >> to sane-devel-request at lists.alioth.debian.org >> > > > > -- > "The truth is an offense, but not a sin" >