- POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL HOW TO
- POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL INSTALL
- POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL FULL
- POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL FREE
Verify that the resolution is 300 dpi in the “Image Information” box.Load your image using the “Input Image” dialog box.In Photoshop, you can set up an action to change the dpi and then run it on all your converted charts automatically. Import the converted chart into Photoshop or an image editing program, copy and paste in the ports if desired and change the resolution to 300 dpi without resampling the image.Convert the charts using the command line or use the NOAA chart converter tool.I priced out the Canadian Great Lake’s charts and the CDs run about $50 per lake. Electronic charts for countries other than the U.S.
POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL HOW TO
If you don’t know how to get NOAA charts for free, then read my Print Your Own NOAA Charts article.
POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL INSTALL
Download and install the software listed above.
POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL FREE
Steps to Print BSB Raster Charts the Easy and Free Way
POSTERAZOR TUTORIAL FULL
Although, I still like the control of doing my slicing in Photoshop, so I can get the exact area I want, PosteRazor makes printing a full chart on multiple sheets easy. For printing bsb raster charts, one of the commenters on the first article pointed out an open source program that slices up large images into smaller page sizes that you can print at home or at a photocopy store.
If you have just a few, you can use the graphical interface as it’s much easier to use. If you have a lot of charts to convert, you can set up a script using the command line bsb converter to make quick work of it. I’ve written an article about how to Print Your Own NOAA Charts using a command line bsb converter, and I’ve also used an graphical interface for NOAA Marine Chart converting. I much prefer to use free NOAA bsb charts and print them on my own. Plates, cups, napkins, and utensils were all solid yellow from the dollar store.For kayakers, buying multiple full-sized charts is not only expensive (at $25 a chart), but the full-sized charts are impractical for folding and carrying in a map case. I love how cheap and reusable and festive and easy to store tissue paper decorations are. The rest of the decorations were tissue paper garland and fans and balls left over from previous parties. I’ve always used Publisher for that in the past, but now that we have a Mac, I found an app called PosteRazor that allowed me to print a saved photo out on multiple pages, then I trimmed the edges with my rotary cutter, and taped them together. I also printed an Everything is Awesome sign for the door, from this free printable here. The font I used is a free download here. If you download and install the font, it will show up in PicMonkey on the “yours” tab on the fonts page. There are little dots of color in the corner that you can grab to make the letters match the existing banner colors. If your child’s name has letters in it that aren’t in my banner, and you’d like to personalize it, you can open the blank one in PicMonkey and add whichever letters you need. Just select each letter you’d like to print to spell whatever you’d like. You can download the photo and letter images I made onto your computer. I made a free download of the printable banner here. It turns out that one of those limits is throwing the same party for the same people two weekends in a row. We’ve moved parties early and late to accommodate the new arrivals, and for the past few years Bobby and Gus have shared a party since they have the same interests and friends and even I have limits. But, as a testament to my extraordinary doggedness, I have kept it up. Which was all fine and good until we ended up with four kids’ birthdays in the thirty-seven days between October 26th and December 2nd. I’m not saying that every kid NEEDS that, just that it’s something I personally decided I wanted to do for my kids. I vowed that each of my kids would have a homemade birthday cake and a party every year, no matter how many of them we ended up with. I latched on to birthday parties as The Thing I had to maintain to make it Not Weird to have this many kids. I’m not sure why, but back early in my mothering journey, when it began to look like I was going to end up with more kids than, well, than I had previously realized was even POSSIBLE.