auxi wrote:Okay, I'll give it a shot. Not for sure if I've got Windows LG, but I'll check.
BTW, like your avatar.
If you've got a Window's-based computer just go to My Pictures
Next, put your cursor over the picture or graphic you want, and press the "right click" button on your mouse. A menu will appear with over a dozen options. About half way down the list of options is one called, "Open With"--click on that. When you do, you'll get four options; choose
"Microsoft Office Picture Manager."
The picture will now open with tools that allow you to manipulate the image. At the top of the screen, you should see an option that reads, "Edit Pictures . . ." Click on that title. A variety of editing tools will appear on the right hand side of the picture.
To get the picture small enough for Chordie's standards, you first want to crop the image, which means you cut away unwanted parts of the picture. If you click on the "Crop" tool, the image will be surrounded by eight, evenly spaced, bold black lines. These are Crop handles. Click on a crop handle (start with the upper right hand corner handle) and move your mouse toward the center of your image. As the handle moves towards the center of the picture, you'll see the outer edges of the image become a little foggy--that represents the part of the image you'll be cutting away. Move different handles to cut off diffrerent parts of the picture. Don't worry if you cut too much, the original image will be unaffected. You can also start over without doing any damage to the original.
When you've cut down the image, save it. The Save button is located under the "File" pull down menu at the top of the screen. Call it, "Chordie Avatar." Now you'll have the original image on your computer, plus your Choride image.
Probably the cropped image is still too big for Chordie, so you'll use another editing tool to shrink it down even more. Click on the "Edit Pictures . . . " again, and your tools will reload on the right side of your screen. Now click on "Resize"and then click on "Percentage of original width x height." You'll see 100 in a little box. That means your image is full size. If you click on the little down arrow, you can start to reduce the size of the image. Under "Size setting summary" the computer will tell you in terms of percentage and pixels, just how small the image is getting. Keep shrinking it until you get it to the size you want, and then click "Ok" and save the image again.
If the image meets Chordie's size limits, it can now be uploaded.