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I currently use Adobe Photoshop Elements 9 to do my work, I take pdf's on family records and highlite, cut, delete and highlite, move and drop in place, then highlite cut and save to jpeg, tiff or png.
The problem, when I import to PSE the quality of the pdf is greatly reduced.
What program would keep the quality and still alow me to do my cut and paste. seconly can you take a read only PDF and make it read illegible writing that is not very human eye readable.
Thank you
Des
There are some concerns in your post that should be looked at before you decide:
1. Software and tools
Photoshop Elements 9 was released in 2010. Since then (24 14 years), a helluva lot of features have been developed by the industry to help with photo color correction, image adjustments, and even creative tools. (Photoshop's content-aware tools can let you remove the flagpole that's behind your mom's head and replace it with realistic generic background. I use this to
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There are some concerns in your post that should be looked at before you decide:
1. Software and tools
Photoshop Elements 9 was released in 2010. Since then (24 14 years), a helluva lot of features have been developed by the industry to help with photo color correction, image adjustments, and even creative tools. (Photoshop's content-aware tools can let you remove the flagpole that's behind your mom's head and replace it with realistic generic background. I use this tool nearly every day in my photography and imaging work. But it can also generate a 3rd hand for your mom, too!)
So you might want to look at several other programs on the market that can give you better tools to do what you're already doing, as well as more tools that you never knew you needed. Some of my favorites:
2. File formats
First, avoid the JPG/JPEG format because it is a lossy compression file format. That means it automatically compresses the file's data and degrades the quality of the image each and every time you save the file. Text is pixelated and not machine readable/searchable, colors are degraded, and artifact/halos start to appear around dark/light objects. They look like wavy lines around elements. Do this often enough on a file and you end up with a Xerox of a Xerox of a Xerox that looks like crud.
To retain the maximum quality, readability/searchability, and usefullness, I suggest using these file formats, especially for long-time storage or archiving of your family's documents:
However, there's a critical catch to this: Garbage in = garbage out.
As you work with different file formats, quality can be degraded and text can be lost or made unreadable; you must always use the highest-quality version of the original scan or photo that you can acquire. These guidelines might help:
... secondly can you take a read only PDF and make it read illegible writing that is not very human eye readable.Thank you
Des
By @Desmond3590442172ux
Can you give us more details about this?
Do you mean take cursive or print handwriting and OCR it? (OCR = optional character recognition https://www.ibm.com/blog/optical-character-recognition/).
If so, I don't know of any software that can do this with handwriting (cursive or print), but if it was available, it might be in Acrobat's OCR (newer versions) and ABBBY Fine Reader.
Good luck with the project. Hope this helps.
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Thank you to everyone who replied to me, to answer you first response all the online file I use and download are 99% PDF, thus family tree requires non pdf files to be installed thus fro my first question as most are text file taken from a pro photo. I haope that explained it better.
The second part in parts is the same as the first, mostly photo of a text page.
Des
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I have attached a page to let you see what I an ajusting. I will straighten, keep the header, then cut out the data in the main body of the names I do not want, then combine head that the piece I want to key and same as another file.
Des
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Hi Des @Desmond3590442172ux,
The page you referenced is a census or registration list from the late 1880s and as expected, is filled in with cursive handwriting.
This is difficult text to OCR (optical character recognition), but there are some software tools that could make some progress for you. Try Googling for "OCR handwriting" and that should bring up many options for you.
Regardless of the software you choose to use, there are 3 steps:
I tried this method with Acrobat DC 2024 and it didn't do a good enough job OCR-ing the handwriting. Here's Adobe's scoop on this https://www.adobe.com/acrobat/hub/can-ocr-recognize-handwriting.html
This has piqued my interest because my brother has been working on our family's geneology for years and I'm sure this could help him, too.
Which reminds me...the family tree websites like Ancestry.com might have developed decent OCR software for this task, given that the topic is their raison d'être.
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Bevi.. thank you for your time and effort information very helful.
Des