hmm just wondering since there is no cropping tool like PS where u just make the little box the size u want an click crop.....if I make the image full size in PS and crop down to say a 4x4 piece and print that, will it be equivalent to the same size crop in the qimage scissors method? trying to make a test strip of a panorama and it will only make a test in the same width/length proportion of the panorama (hope that is a clear description)
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Why do you say there is no place where you make a little box and crop?
You can do that in the Image editor. Draw you crop with or without aspect ratio constraints.
It sounds though, that you want to test a portion of your print at teh same ppi as the big print.
This is all set up for you in Qimage.
It is called TEST STRIP, and requires no more than going to the Fill Page Editor screen, and clicking the Test strip icon a few times (stopping at the size you want), and moving the image around in in the little crop window to get the part you want to test.
Mike has it pretty well documented in the Help File, but, I'll paste it here for you.
Test Strips - Before printing large prints and committing large amounts of paper, printing a small section of the large print can be helpful for the purpose of judging detail, sharpness, and color. There is a "Test strip" function on the full page editor that will allow you to create a small, proportional print that contains a piece of the larger print. From the main window in Qimage, start by adding the photo you wish to print at the desired final size (20x30 inches for example). Then click the "Edit Page" button below the preview page, select the print on the page, click the "Cropping" button on the right and the "Test strip" button will be visible under the small crop window. The test strip button can be used in any of the following ways:
You may repeatedly click the test strip button to make your test strip progressively smaller until you have a size as small as you like.
You may click the test strip button once and then change the size of the print manually using the sizing functions on the main window. Once the test strip button is clicked, that print remains a test strip which will conform to a piece of the original size print until you remove the print crop or manually move the crop zoom lever in the page editor. You could, for example, start with a 20x30 inch print, click the test strip button, and then choose a new size of 4x6. Since the print has been identified as a test strip, the 4x6 print will be a 4x6 portion of the 20x30 print! The area of the 20x30 print shown in the 4x6 can be adjusted by simply dragging the crop in the page editor or using the high precision cropping tool in the page editor.
You may select a smaller paper size (4x6 for example) and add your large print to the queue, specifying that it is OK to create a poster larger than one page. Then simply click the test strip button in the page editor once and the test strip will automatically be resized to the size of your (smaller) paper. The crop can then be moved manually to any part of the print using the cropping tool in the page editor.
Note that while left clicking on the test strip button will make the test strip smaller, right clicking or Ctrl-clicking on the test strip button will make the test strip larger.
Fred