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FC BRACKNELL DEMO
Mike - the last logo I sent you earlier today was
sized at 140x140 pixels, and to make this appear at its best it
should also be displayed at 140x140 on your website. However, when
you load it to your site it's now appearing as 145x180 pixels.
My guess is that this is not something you can control and that the
web template you are using automatically re-sizes the logo to this size.
Assuming this is the case - I've produced a new version sized at 145x180
so that hopefully when you load it it will stay at 145x180 and will
appear "perfect".
Here's a comparison of how it should look compared to
what you currently have. Frankly, I know there is not a huge
difference ... but when viewed closely the current version (on the
left) is not perfectly circular (it's slightly oval), the edges are
not perfectly uniform and smooth and the text gets a little
"broken" as it rotates.
If you too can see the difference and want to try the
latest logo (on the right) - as normal, right click on it.
Steve
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CURRENTLY USING - Produced from a 140x140 pixel logo which then
gets resized to 145x180 |
LATEST IMPROVED LOGO - Produced from a 145x180 pixel logo |
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Below is the info I sent earlier today. Ignore
it - I've just kept it for my own records ...
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CURRENTLY USING |
NEW IMPROVED LOGO |
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Guidelines |
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As normal - right click on the logo and "save picture as"
to download it.
- Do not resize it on the website. It's 140x140
pixels ... keep it at that. If you need a somewhat different
size just let me know.
- It's designed to work on a white background (as you
have). It will not work as well on a different colour background.
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Explanations |
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Resizing an image on the webpage leads to jagged edges - this is
especially the case where one enlarges a small image to a much larger
one. But even a small change in size gives uneven results.
See below.
- When the image is generated, if the edge of the
image falls half-way across a pixel then the pixel value is
calculated from the average of the image colour and the background
colour. This leads to very smooth edges when shown with the
correct background - but can lead to a "halo effect" if the
image is placed on a different background. The effect is most
pronounced if the intended and actual background colours are very
different in brightness. See below.
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Effect Of Re-Sizing On Web-Page (Intended as 140x140) |
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120x120 |
130x130 |
140x140 - Perfect |
150x150 |
160x160 |
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Effect Of Different Coloured Background (Intended as white) |
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Just Noticeable |
Hardly Noticeable |
As Intended - Perfect |
Very Noticeable |
Very Noticeable |
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And Finally - Not For The Queasey (I'm not
suggesting you actually use these !!)
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