Deploys Outlook signatures along with templates which are customised with data from AD. Takes a little while to set up but saves a lot of time / hassle in the long run:) IMO large image signatures are a no-no, not just because they're annoying when you want to copy / paste, but also because they may be caught by some spam filters. 'We had the same problem! There is a glitch in outlook signatures dealing with images. To avoid it: 1. Compose your signature in outlook and change the text-wrapping.format>text wrapping. I changed it to behind text. Then the trick is to Ctrl 'A'.to select all. Create a new signature and paste it in.
When I 'Insert Picture' a JPEG in Outlook 2010 it automatically resizes the image and, I think, recompresses it too. I realise this would be useful for photographs or for people who try to email 1MB BMPs but I would like to email around an image at the original pixel size without recompression. Is there a way to turn this off, or better still choose settings for each image insert? I found in the Office help.
It's for Word, PowerPoint and Excel not Outlook but points you at File, Options, Advanced, Image Settings. There's no equivalent section in Outlook. I know Outlook uses Word as its editor so I've looked at Word's settings but there isn't an 'original size' here: there's only 'turn off image recompression' and pick target DPI from 96, 150, 220. I guess Office is finding a DPI value in the JPEG file and scaling it up or down to match this setting. I can't find an equivalent option in Outlook's options menu but there's so many settings and pop-up dialogs I may have missed something.
Resets the image to the rescaled version, not the original. I can't see a way to edit a pixel value into size values in the image properties after insert. I realise I can probably achieve this by editing the image metadata in PhotoShop elements or similar but there ought to be a way without editing the file? This is new behaviour in Outlook 2010; 2007 didn't do this. When you use the Insert / Picture feature to insert an inline image, Outlook (and other MS apps such as Word and Excel) will look at the DPI setting in the image file. If your picture has a DPI setting of anything other than 96, Outlook will resize (i.e., scale and resample) your image (permanently) to 96 DPI upon insertion and there isn't much you can do about it after the fact.
The way to avoid this problem altogether is to open the image in a good image editor, set the DPI value to 96 DPI, and then save the image. If you do not resample the image when you do this, a good image editor will in no way affect the actual image content (i.e., it will remain pixel for pixel identical). After you do this, when you insert the image into an Outlook e-mail, Outlook will show it (and send it) in its original size, unless you manually resize / scale it. This is how you avoid the gratuitous 'Outlook scaling, blurring, and destroying your pristine image,' issue. Searching for ways to resolve this problem took me quite a bit of time and effort.
I would like to thank the following informative web site for describing both the origin of this problem and its solution:. Update: The 96 dpi mentioned in my answer above is not fixed. In Windows, you can choose to set the DPI value to other settings using for example, Control Panel All Control Panel Items Display in Windows 7. This change affects the DPI value that MS Office products use. If your text size is set to something other than 'Smaller' (i.e., 100% / 96 DPI), you will have to use a DPI setting other than 96 DPI, depending on the text scaling factor you have set.
This is especially true on laptops where people tend to use larger text settings, because their screens are much smaller (often set this way right out of the factory). For example, if you are using Medium size text (i.e., 125% of the 96 DPI value), your images will have to have their DPI setting changed to 120 in order not to get rescaled/resampled when inserted into Outlook. The moral of the story is that if you use 96 DPI and see that your inserted images are still coming out blurry, check your Text Size settings in Windows and adjust the DPI value accordingly. I'm using Windows 7, and have been trying to copy a selection from Excel 2007 to an email in Outlook 2007. When I do this, and select 'paste as picture' from the options offered, it looks perfect.
But once the email is sent (and Outlook compresses the picture), it looks like total garbage. It's mind boggling that anyone at MS could believe this default behavior is acceptable. The solution in this case is to paste from Excel into MS Paint, then COPY the selection from Paint (no need to select again, since it's already selected after the paste), and paste into Outlook. Passing the image through MS Paint somehow resolves this problem, at least under these specific circumstances. I would suggest always TEST sending any image, before sending it out officially. There's also right-click and use size & position, set it to 100%, but I don't think that's the issue. I'm having an issue recreating the problem as when I attach a jpeg to my draft it keeps the image the original size.
I sent out the email and the picture stayed the same size (no compression), but when I viewed the picture Outlook automatically shrunk the picture to fit the window. I saved the picture and opened it, and it was the original size. In short, this may be a display problem, not something in your email. – Nov 15 '10 at 17:39. OK, thanks for looking at this. I've just retested with the main image from this page which is 480x640 38K. Insert picture and it appears larger, and if I send the email and save the image from that then it has been upscaled to 637x853 50K.
Oddly if I try the same from 2007 not 2010 I do get the upscale, but to 640x853 that time - I had thought that just worked. (Of course it may be a display issue and 2010 is saving the image from the email as the upscaled version - I can't see how to hack apart the.eml to tell.) – Nov 16 '10 at 1:04.