Adobe Dreamweaver Forums



Last 10 THreads :         How do I link an object on the stage to an externalclass file? (Last Post : Laura MS - Replies : 1 - Views : 2 )           »          Sound.position (Last Post : hoppe11 - Replies : 4 - Views : 5 )           »          Flash-PHP Mail Form (Last Post : richmaxw - Replies : 6 - Views : 7 )           »          Sessions and subdomains (Last Post : LukeDD - Replies : 0 - Views : 1 )           »          Problem with parentApplication in inline component (Last Post : Greg Lafrance - Replies : 1 - Views : 2 )           »          ZEND STUDIO ! does it work on any php capable server orneed some sepcialized? (Last Post : manofspirit - Replies : 4 - Views : 5 )           »          Help linking buttons (Last Post : kuldmedal - Replies : 0 - Views : 1 )           »          Help linking buttons (Last Post : kuldmedal - Replies : 0 - Views : 1 )           »          Help linking buttons (Last Post : kuldmedal - Replies : 0 - Views : 1 )           »          cfapplication in Application.cfc (Last Post : Kronin555 - Replies : 1 - Views : 2 )           »         


Home Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
User Info Statistics
Go Back   Adobe Dreamweaver Forums > Macromedia Software > Fireworks
 
Tags:



Reply
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
biofircenter
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Reducing Image Size

Hello everyone,

Please help me how to reduce the file size of image that produced with
Fireworks, i've been using Fireworks for some times and the big size of the
result file is a big problem for me.

For example the image logo that i use for my website
http://www.biofircenter.com is to heavy to load for fast loading site.

Thanks for your answer.



Reply With Quote
Sponsored Links
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
PJR
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

You should be 'exporting' the file not 'saving' it. Export the file you
want to upload as a gif/jpeg/png and save the file you want to keep on your
local machine for any future editing. 'Saving' by default saves as a
Fireworks png which keeps any / all layers in tact, which is why they are
large file sizes.

Peter
_________________
| Hello everyone,
|
| Please help me how to reduce the file size of image that produced with
| Fireworks, i've been using Fireworks for some times and the big size of
the
| result file is a big problem for me.
|
| For example the image logo that i use for my website
| http://www.biofircenter.com is to heavy to load for fast loading site.
|
| Thanks for your answer.
|


Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
Alex Marino
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

are you talking about this one?
http://www.biofircenter.com/images/l...fir-center.gif

because it is only 9kb - which is not too big

alex


biofircenter wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>
> Please help me how to reduce the file size of image that produced with
> Fireworks, i've been using Fireworks for some times and the big size of the
> result file is a big problem for me.
>
> For example the image logo that i use for my website
> http://www.biofircenter.com is to heavy to load for fast loading site.
>
> Thanks for your answer.
>

Reply With Quote


  #4 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
pixlor
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

[q]Originally posted by: biofircenter
Please help me how to reduce the file size of image that produced with
Fireworks, i've been using Fireworks for some times and the big size of the
result file is a big problem for me.

For example the image logo that i use for my website
http://www.biofircenter.com is to heavy to load for fast loading site.[/q]
That logo is very complex. The .gif format compresses by "run length
encoding." Instead of noting the color for each pixel, sections of rows of the
same color are noted. In your logo, you have small runs of the same color,
consequently the savings with the .gif format are less than they would be if
(for example) you didn't have the drop shadows, you didn't have the stripes in
the letters, and you didn't have the shading and stripes in the shield. Try
removing one or more of these design elements to increase the sections of rows
with solid color and see if you get an improvement.

Also, just to make sure.... When you "Save as," Fireworks includes its
proprietary information in the file header. You want to export the image so
that the Fireworks information is not included.


Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
biofircenter
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

[q]Originally posted by: Newsgroup User
You should be 'exporting' the file not 'saving' it. Export the file you
want to upload as a gif/jpeg/png and save the file you want to keep on your
local machine for any future editing. 'Saving' by default saves as a
Fireworks png which keeps any / all layers in tact, which is why they are
large file sizes.

Peter
_________________
| Hello everyone,
|
| Please help me how to reduce the file size of image that produced with
| Fireworks, i've been using Fireworks for some times and the big size of
the
| result file is a big problem for me.
|
| For example the image logo that i use for my website
| http://www.biofircenter.com is to heavy to load for fast loading site.
|
| Thanks for your answer.
|


[/q]

Thank u for the reply,

I've try to export the image when saving it to 'smaller jpg', but it still to
large, then i try to reduce the resolution to '70' but the result is my image
become al little blur.

Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
biofircenter
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

[q]Originally posted by: Newsgroup User
are you talking about this one?
http://www.biofircenter.com/images/l...fir-center.gif

because it is only 9kb - which is not too big

alex
[/q]

Yes u r right, thats the image filename. Maybe it's not to big if that is the
only image in my site, but combining with all my image at that page, well its
big enough for loading time. In my country the majority internet connection
speed is only about 56 kbps, that's why i need a fast loading site.

Reply With Quote


  #7 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
biofircenter
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

[q]Originally posted by: pixlor
That logo is very complex. The .gif format compresses by "run length
encoding." Instead of noting the color for each pixel, sections of rows of the
same color are noted. In your logo, you have small runs of the same color,
consequently the savings with the .gif format are less than they would be if
(for example) you didn't have the drop shadows, you didn't have the stripes in
the letters, and you didn't have the shading and stripes in the shield. Try
removing one or more of these design elements to increase the sections of rows
with solid color and see if you get an improvement.

Also, just to make sure.... When you "Save as," Fireworks includes its
proprietary information in the file header. You want to export the image so
that the Fireworks information is not included.
[/q]
You're right, my logo is complex and it use shadow, emboss, shading, stripes,
etc. But that's the reason why i'm using Fireworks, it makes my image alive, if
i don't use those effect than why i buy Fireworks, am i right ?

I try your Export trick, and yes u r right it makes the file size smaller, but
i already using that trick along time ago.

Does any one know some kind of tool or any Fireworks trick to reducing the
image file size without reducing its resolution ?



Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 10-31-2008, 06:16 PM
pixlor
 
Posts: n/a
Diggs:
Default Re: Reducing Image Size

You have a certain amount of information in your image that is determined by
- the dimensions
- the number of colors
- the level of detail (stripes and shadows)

If you reduce any one of these, your file size will be smaller. Other than
that, your 9K file size is the best you can expect. If you don't want to
compromise on your design, then you will have to accept the file size.

I tried making a graphic from a screen capture. Exporting as a .gif gives me a
file size of 9.31k. If I reduce the number colors to 128, the file size is
8.15k. If I reduce the number of colors to 64, then the file size is 7.04k. If
I overlay the 64-color image on your original logo and set the blending mode to
Difference, I can see that there are only minor variations, mostly in the
shield. That is one approach you might consider.

But this is just your logo. Saving 2k here is only a small portion of your
entire page. The other header image is also about 9k. If you use a simple,
non-script font that emphasizes horizontal and vertical strokes, you will have
less anti-aliasing, which will allow you to take better advantage of the .gif
format. Also, are your flashing animations really necessary? You could save
bytes there if you had two frames rather than four. I would think that static
..jpgs of the same file sizes would be better choices, as they would give you
higher quality photographs of the objects.

Anyway, there is no magic that can be done. To present information takes
bytes. To have fewer bytes you need to present less information.



Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



© Camley Interactive (camley.info) 2008 - all logos and images are copywrite their respective owners.
Proud member of the Camley Interactive Network
All times are GMT. The time now is 06:43 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0 ©2007, Crawlability, Inc.
Cheap Car Insurance - Compare Motor Insurance
Endsleigh Car Insurance Natwest Car Insurance
More Than Car Insurance Norwich Union Car Insurance
Prudential Car Insurance Zurich Car Insurance
Inactive Reminders By Mished.co.uk