Think Draw Forums

Latest Posts:
AuthorComment

Login

Well, I've often thought it would be nice to be somebody else for a while ... then I abandon the idea when I realise how many people address us personally ... I like that a lot.

nobiggie

<<<<<<<<<<<-----POSER ;}

nobiggie

ty Qsilv=) and you are right , it doesn't really matter but ty for satisfying my curiosity. This is a very fun website

Luna

Wonderful explanation Qsilv. Thanks.

Qsilv

Polenta's steps are exactly right.

The pix here are created in Flash (a program), so right-clicking the finished piece as we normally view it won't let you save directly. You need to go to the 'PRINT' version (which is not Flash) to capture a picture directly at normal size.
(Thumbnail size can also be captured from the right-click menu.)

To get the greatest detail, however, zoom in on the picture as tightly as your screen will allow, and then simply click PrintScr (upper right, most keyboards), and then paste into any graphics program as Polenta said. Saving that as a .jpg is generally best.

To zoom in, using either MSIE or Firefox browser, click View along the top of your browser and Zoom will be one of the drop down menu options. The keyboard shortcut is to hold down the Control key and type the + sign to zoom in, or Control and the - sign to zoom out... this can be done several times... or Ctrl and the zero returns it to normal all in one step.

Copyright issues are a bit odd on the internet. Worth researching if it really matters. Short version goes like this tho-- you have the right to anything you've created unless you sign that right away, so read the various website's "terms" --TD doesn't make any claim on your stuff.
BUT -- it's also widely accepted that in the world of art one can make copies of other people's work as long as they either do it in a different medium or make significant changes (tricky term, 'significant') and state "after" in the crediting (eg. "Solitude - by Qsilv, after Login" means I am crediting Login as the originator of the idea).

;p