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How do I print a very large photo across multiple 8 x 10 pages?

New Here ,
Apr 30, 2013 Apr 30, 2013

I am trying to use Photoshop to create a glass pattern that is larger than letter size paper.  Is there a way to print a single photo split across multiple pages?

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correct answers 2 Correct answers

New Here , May 01, 2013 May 01, 2013

The easiest way to do this is create a Photoshop PDF file from the large document and then open the file with Adobe Acrobat (I have Reader) and print it as a banner.  This correctly tiles the document to fit across multiple pages.  Thank you for all your quick responses to my question.  If anyone from Adobe is listening - why not put tiling into Photoshop???

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Community Expert , Oct 25, 2024 Oct 25, 2024

Although that works, it’s a lot more work than the other suggestions. Using the automatic tiling in Acrobat or InDesign means you just set it up, click Print, and it works.

 

The Slice tool method also has several problems:

  • The Slice tool cannot create overlaps like real print tiling features do. Auto-tiling can automatically create overlaps between tiles to cover up any gaps between printed tiles when they are mounted together later. 
  • Because each slice gets exported as a separate file, you ha
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LEGEND ,
Apr 30, 2013 Apr 30, 2013

It's called tiling. Create the doument at a size larger than the printer can handle, then you should see an option in the printers panel or in the printers preferences for tiling. If you have acrobat pro, that has a tiling feature as well.

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New Here ,
Apr 30, 2013 Apr 30, 2013

Create a new document at the size you need it, then make guides to divide up the canvas into 8.5in x 11in sections. Add your graphics and when you're ready to print select one of the sections and crop the image then print it, then undo it and crop the next section and print it and so on. I'd flatten the artwork before each crop.

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Community Beginner ,
May 01, 2013 May 01, 2013

Photoshop doesn't have a tiling feature as far as I know and I looked. Place the file into an Illustrator document. Illustrator has a tiling feature in the print options that make it very easy.

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Participant ,
May 01, 2013 May 01, 2013

Epson printers usually have a tiling function. You can take a file and print it in up to 16 sheets.

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New Here ,
May 01, 2013 May 01, 2013

The easiest way to do this is create a Photoshop PDF file from the large document and then open the file with Adobe Acrobat (I have Reader) and print it as a banner.  This correctly tiles the document to fit across multiple pages.  Thank you for all your quick responses to my question.  If anyone from Adobe is listening - why not put tiling into Photoshop???

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LEGEND ,
May 01, 2013 May 01, 2013

Hmm, I could have sworn Photoshop had such an option, oh well, here I found the next best thing, (sort of, since I have not tried it)

http://www.adobe.com/cfusion/exchange/index.cfm?event=extensionDetail&extid=1044988

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Community Beginner ,
May 02, 2013 May 02, 2013

Eh....I dunno. Sure you can do it from Photoshop but what's this 5x5 and  3x3 stuff? In Illustrator it's very straightforward. You simply make  your image as big as you want it to be and then specify how much you  want the prints to repeat along the edge (1/2 inch, 1/4 inch etc.,)  Illustrator automatically put it on as few sheets as possible to print  it at the size you need. What could be easier? But that's assuming you  have Illustrator of course.

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New Here ,
Nov 17, 2014 Nov 17, 2014

Thank you so much for posting this solution! I am happy to have gotten the right answer.  A Note to future readers:  My version of PDF reader ( Version 10.1.7, November 2014) it is NOT called 'Banner', it's called 'Poster' in the Reader print dialogue box.  Took me a while to find it.

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Community Beginner ,
Sep 13, 2016 Sep 13, 2016

This worked very well for me.  Thanks!

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New Here ,
Jun 10, 2021 Jun 10, 2021

I am shocked that something like this is still not in all appropriate Adobe products. 

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New Here ,
Sep 12, 2024 Sep 12, 2024

Absolutely brilliant! Resized and printed original as a poster in seconds. No muss, no fuss. Thanks for sharing the info!!!!

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Engaged ,
Apr 22, 2014 Apr 22, 2014

Its incredible that there is no tiling feature. I think PS is alone on this. Maybe when printers become obsolete they'll add the feature.

Anyways, thanks for the PS Extension link, i may try that.

An alternative is Microsoft Paint, yes that free tiny program (that many people criticise). Open your pic with Paint, print preview, change paper size from Scale to 100% and it'll tile to your paper size.

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LEGEND ,
May 04, 2014 May 04, 2014

If I recall the free adobe reader can print tiled pages. If it does, just save your images to pdf. (I see this is a year old thread, sorry. But I will keep this info here just in case someone else has this issue.

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Community Beginner ,
Jul 20, 2014 Jul 20, 2014

See this video tutorial - How to print large format posters and banners with Poster Printer - YouTube, it may help you to solve your problem.

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New Here ,
Jan 20, 2020 Jan 20, 2020

Thanks for the great info. 

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New Here ,
Jul 04, 2022 Jul 04, 2022

What correct size we use for all iver

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Community Expert ,
Jul 07, 2022 Jul 07, 2022

HI, there's some help here

 

neilB

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Community Beginner ,
Apr 17, 2023 Apr 17, 2023

Hi Paul. The Print Settings dialog refers to the settings for your printer - not all printers will have a tile option (mine doesn't).

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2023 Aug 04, 2023

Thanks for PosteRazor

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New Here ,
Oct 25, 2024 Oct 25, 2024

You can do this in photoshop. Slice the image into the desired pieces with the slice tool, File > Export > Export for Web (Legacy). When you Sav..., choose Images only and choose to save each slice.

Format: Images Only
Settings: Default (or whatever)
Slices: All Slices

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Community Expert ,
Oct 25, 2024 Oct 25, 2024

Although that works, it’s a lot more work than the other suggestions. Using the automatic tiling in Acrobat or InDesign means you just set it up, click Print, and it works.

 

The Slice tool method also has several problems:

  • The Slice tool cannot create overlaps like real print tiling features do. Auto-tiling can automatically create overlaps between tiles to cover up any gaps between printed tiles when they are mounted together later. 
  • Because each slice gets exported as a separate file, you have to print them individually. 20 tiles means you do 20 print jobs. With automatic tiling, you print once and you are done. 
  • Because Save for Web is not designed for printing, the image resolution metadata (and therefore the print dimensions) may be lost unless it is exported with All Metadata selected. 
  • If print color quality is important, attention must be paid to the document color profile vs what Save for Web is set to export. 

 

Overall, it is much easier, faster, and more reliable to use automatic tiling.

 

Using Acrobat is easy because the Reader is free, and can open Photoshop files, so you can be ready to print in less than a minute. Just open the Photoshop file in Acrobat, choose Print, set up tiling, and you are done. 

 

I agree this feature should be in Photoshop. But until then, tiling in Acrobat or InDesign is the simplest, fastest way. In the picture below, a Photoshop file is shown ready to tile in the Print dialog box in Acrobat.

 

Acrobat-tiling.jpg

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Community Expert ,
Oct 30, 2024 Oct 30, 2024
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@Conrad_C Using the automatic tiling in Acrobat or InDesign means you just set it up, click Print, and it works.

Kudos for the succinct explanation - and it uses free software, some very nice tips there. 

 

neilB

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