I have burned a DVD project with all my photos from last year. THere is a photo in the show that I would like to print as a solo print. How can I do that. Unfortunately I did not save all the photos once I burnt the DVD. I am not able to find a "Capture" to even save the photo to my harddrive. Any suggestions? Commerical photo printers do not have luck either. I am running on Roxio Creator DE, Version 9. I am reluctant to upgrade as I have not found this software to be user friendly and don't want to throw more money at something unless I know it will work.
Thanks for any thoughts.
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Printing Hard Copy Of Photo From Within A Dvd Show Printing single photo from show
#2
Posted 05 September 2008 - 01:50 AM
Possibly the simplest way is to stop the playback at the point you want and hit the 'Prins Scrn' button on your keyboard. Open any graphics program (I use Paintshop Pro) and select Edit, Paste as new image
That will put the contents of the computer screen into an image which you can then work on
That will put the contents of the computer screen into an image which you can then work on
If it ain't broke, fiddle with it until it breaks, then fiddle with it until you get it fixed
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
"Rincewind could scream for mercy in nineteen languages and just scream in another forty-four "
"If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee; that will do them in."
“Computers have enabled people to make more mistakes faster than almost any invention in history, with the possible exception of tequila and hand guns.” — Mitch Ratcliffe
Daithi
Home Brew computer
Intel I7 950 on Gigabyte X58A UD3R mobo
12 GB Three Channel DDRAM
Radeon HD4850 512 MB GDR3 graphics
Signalink USB Audio Codec for ham radio connection
1 x 160 GB, 1 x 330 GB, 1 x 400 GB IDE drives
4 x 250 GB SATA 2
LG HL-DT-ST GGW-H20L BD-RE drive
22" Acer P223W monitor
EMC 7.5 on Windows XP 32 SP3
EMC10 on Windows XP64 SP2
Creator 2011 on Windows 7 Ultimate
ECD6 on Gentoo Linux (running under VMWare)
#3
Posted 05 September 2008 - 05:22 AM
QUOTE (Kayak Linda @ Sep 4 2008, 03:53 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>
Thanks for any thoughts.
Use Windows Explorer and see what kind of files are on that DVD.
If all you have is are folders with .vob type files, then the suggestion above is about your a good option. You could also try to rename the .vob files to .mpg and see if VideoWave will see the files. Then you could put it on a storyline and 'extract' the picture.
However, if you burned a DVD with the option to store the original photos on the DVD, you might have the original photos on that DVD. ( At least I think that option was available in v9. I don't currently have it installed on a computer.)
NEXT TIME...... burn those photos to a DATA DVD or CD also. If you've burned it as a movie DVD, you've lost the original quality of the photos.
ml
flying squirrel......"It's more of a gliding thing....."
Intel® Core™2 Duo 2.2 Ghz desktop processor E4500;
3GB DDR2 memory;
DL DVD±RW/CD-RW drive;
500GB SATA 7200 rpm hard drive;
Windows Vista Home Premium ,
ATI RADEON HD 2400,Built-in TV tuner , High-definition audio (8-speaker support), HDMI
Multiformat media reader,
IEEE 1394 (FireWire) interface and 6 high-speed USB 2.0 ports,
PCI card with 4 USB 2.0 and 2 IEEE 1394 ports,
10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
flying squirrel......"It's more of a gliding thing....."
Intel® Core™2 Duo 2.2 Ghz desktop processor E4500;
3GB DDR2 memory;
DL DVD±RW/CD-RW drive;
500GB SATA 7200 rpm hard drive;
Windows Vista Home Premium ,
ATI RADEON HD 2400,Built-in TV tuner , High-definition audio (8-speaker support), HDMI
Multiformat media reader,
IEEE 1394 (FireWire) interface and 6 high-speed USB 2.0 ports,
PCI card with 4 USB 2.0 and 2 IEEE 1394 ports,
10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
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