- Joined
- Dec 27, 2014
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- Printer Model
- L805, WF2010, ET8550, T3100X
If your picture is grayscale, has large areas of one solid color, or has areas of high contrast (sharp differences between light and dark areas), choose the GIF format.
If you want your picture to be in grayscale or to have fewer than 256 colors, then use either the TIFF or GIF format. The TIFF format is the printing industry standard for graphics, because it does not use a lossy compression scheme, which other formats such as JPEG do. It also supports multiple levels of transparency, which few other formats do.
Yes, it certainly prints OK as a .tiff but it previously did as a .jpg and the other .jpgs are OK. Maybe I'll just have to accept that something has changed and either change all the greyscales to .tiff or alternatively convert the doc to a .pdf which also works.Interesting @Ink stained Fingers.
A Google search returned info on inserting images into Microsoft Office products. The following concerns MS Office 2000:
and
Good thought, but, just tried it, made no difference.I wonder if it's the Canon print preview that’s causing this problem, try disabling the Canon print preview because it’s known to cause some print issues with certain Apps..
I'm a bit nervous about doing that. It was a few months ago and a fair bit of water has gone under the bridge since then in system additions.Roll the system back using a restore point prior to the date of satisfactory greyscale printing in work, and try it again.