@John:
Hey CWO Marc, I spent 3 hours last night, trying, to no avail, to follow your instructions to reduce the size of the pictures. No matter what I did, it wouldn’t reduce them.
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I never figured how to open another paint without their being a picture. Your screen shows it all white, but I don’t know how you did that or just didn’t understand how to do it.
How do you normally open your Paint program? Do you activate it from your Start button (or whatever gives you acceess to your list of Windows accessories)? If so, it should open as a blank Paint document. And if so, you can open a second blank Paint document in the same way, by using your Start button (or whatever). You can actually have several Paint documents going simultaneously (as many a six or seven, I think), though for your purposes two should suffice. And in fact, you only need one Paint document to use the first method I explained; the two-document method is just an alternative, and in fact it’s clumsier than the one-document method, so don’t pay any further attention to it.
At this point, I think your best option would really be to ask someone to show you in person how to apply the techniques I was describing (or better ones, if they know any). Sometimes there’s no substitute for the in-person approach, as opposed to trying to follow instructions in print or instructions in pictures. You shouldn’t have to spend three hours experimenting without success; either there’s something wonky about the version of Paint you’re using, or there’s something that I’m failing to grasp about the way you’re using Paint as opposed to the way I use it. Having an experienced Paint user eyeball your situation in person would be the surest way to get at the heart of the problem.
If you don’t know anybody who uses Paint, then here’s a fall-back solution. It’s not ideal, because you’ll lose picture quality, but it’s the best I can offer at this point. Forget about the whole idea of trimming the wasted space from your pictures, and instead simply use the Resize function to shrink the image. I’m not talking about the Magnify function, which has no effect on your image file (it simply controls how much of it you see in Paint). I’m talking about the Resize button, which calls up a box that reads (in my version) Horizontal 100 Vertical 100. Type 50 over the 100s to replace them and hit OK. Your picture file will be shrunk by 50%. (So will your picture quality, but that’s unavoidable.) Then re-save your picture, under a new file name so that you don’t shrink the original.