126. Insert a Graphic Image into a Drawing
111 Draw from Scratch 117 About Manipulating Objects 127 Scan a Picture into Draw Draw supports virtually every kind of graphics file in use today, and you can easily insert these graphic images into your drawings. For example, you might insert a piece of royalty-free clipart to spice up a sign you're making. After an images is inserted into a drawing, you can resize, move, copy, duplicate, and perform similar tasks.
1. | Click from File Choose Insert, Picture, From File from the menu or click the From File button on the Drawing toolbar to display the Insert Picture dialog box, where you can locate the image you want to insert into your drawing. |
2. | Insert the Image Browse to the location where your image is located, select it, and click Open . The image is inserted into the drawing. You can resize the image by clicking it and dragging one of its handles inward or outward. Move the image by clicking and dragging it to a new location. |
3. | Edit the Image Select the image, and the Picture toolbar automatically appears at the top of the screen, providing you with the following options: [View full size image] ![]()
The brightness of an image's midtones (middle values).
The cutting off of parts of an image or, in the case of Draw images, the scaled shrinking of an image to a smaller size from within the Crop dialog box. |
4. | Crop if Needed With the image selected, click the Picture toolbar's Crop button to open the Crop dialog box. Enable the Keep scale option to retain the ratio between the height and width of the original image. If you want to remove portions of the image but maintain its size in the drawing, enable the Keep image size option instead.If you choose Keep scale, enter values in the Left, Right, Top , and Bottom boxes to tell Draw how much to trim off that side of the image. If you chose Keep image size, the values you enter tell Draw how much to increase or decrease the vertical or horizontal scale of the image. The preview shows you how your entries will affect the final imagethe cropping rectangle displays the portion of the image that will be kept if you crop.Using the Width and Height boxes in the Scale area, you can adjust the scale of the image by the percentage you enter. For example, you can stretch the image horizontally and make it twice as wide as it was by entering 150% in the Width box only. With the Width and Height boxes in the Image size area, you can keep the image proportions, but change its relative size. To restore the image to its original size and proportions if you overcrop, you can click the Original Size button. Click OK to apply your cropping instructions. |