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Participant
February 14, 2023
Question

Deskewing seems to make text blurry? Why? How can I preserve text/image quality/sharpness?

  • February 14, 2023
  • 3 replies
  • 1621 views

Using Adobe Acrobat Pro

Continuous Release (version 2022.003.20258)

 

How can I get aligned pages WITHOUT text quality worsening?

 

I know how to get Adobe Acrobat to align the pages: “Scan & OCR” > Enhance > Filters > Deskew (On).

 

But it seems that when a page is aligned (“deskewed”), the text becomes slightly blurry. This happens even if I have chosen to have no image compression.

 

Why does this happen? I consider this a bug. How can I have the same image/text quality when a page is deskewed?

This topic has been closed for replies.

3 replies

Participant
August 22, 2023

I experience the same thing (using version 2022.003.20310). Source images are uncompressed tif-files. I tried to switch any setting I could find to lossless compression, yet after using the deskew funtion I see clear evidence of jpeg compression. Did anyone find a solution to this issue?

Participant
August 2, 2023

I experience the same thing. The default Enhance File settings blur text on my scans that are 600 dpi so the blur is noticeable. I turned off deskew and its not blurry now. Guess its a bug.

Karl Heinz  Kremer
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 3, 2023
Karl Heinz  Kremer
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 14, 2023

What is your image resolution? You can find out by using either the preflight tools to get an inventory of your images, or by using the "Object Inspector" in the "Output Preview" tool. I have never noticed that scans would get blurry when using deskew, so either my eyes are not get great, or it has something to do with the source image, and the most likely culprit would be the image resolution. One other explanation could be that the scaned image was saved with JPEG compression (which is a lossy format), and in order to deskew (or do any other image cleanup), the image would need to be uncompressed and re-compressed. This would introduce more compression artifacts, which could be interpreted as blurryness.