Tablet PC and Ultra-Mobile PC News, Forums, and Video Reviews  
       
 
 


 

Sunday, April 20, 2008

« TabletKiosk GETAC G840XT Flickr Photo SetMain  | Microsoft Experiments With Force Sensing Technolog... »

Creating a Wallpaper that Works in Portrait and Landscape

- Craig Pringle

I was in Seattle recently for the MVP Summit and I had a little time to look around the city. While I was there one of the sites I visited was the first ever Starbucks, which is located near Pike Place Market.

I took this photo of Starbucks Ground Zero.

PICT0063

Between the Ray Ozzie and Steve Ballmer keynotes I knocked up a new wallpaper with a distinctly Seattle feel to it to commemorate the trip.  I have a little trick for making a wallpaper that works in both portrait and landscape.  This is basically to size the image so that it is smaller than the desktop so that it sits nicely in the middle and does not distort when you rotate into portrait mode.  To make this work you need to ensure that width of the image is less than or equal to the short side of the screen.  For instance on my Lenovo X60 I run at 1440x1050 - so the target size will be such that the top edge of the photo above would be 1050 pixels wide.

This means that, when the image is centered it will be positioned like this on the desktop.

image

OK, the scale may not be perfect, but you get the idea.  Now if you left it like that it would look a bit lame.  The trick is to blend in with the background.

For this particular wallpaper I though a black and white effect would be good.  My Lenovo is my work provided tablet and it only really has software I use for work installed.  The only decent image editing application I had installed was the SnagIt Editor.  I opened the original image in the SnagIt Editor and converted the image to grayscale. 

Next I selected Edge Effects and selected Fade Edge.  I set the background color to black and then applied the fade effect to all four edges. 

The finished image looks like this (note - you can click the thumbnail to view or download the wallpaper)

First Starbucks (1050x788) 

As I said before the trick making this work is to blend in with the background.  The desktop background, that is.  So first I set the image as the wallpaper ensuring that it is set to center the image, then I click on the Change background color link and set that to black.

image

The finished effect looks good in both landscape...

image

and portrait.

image



Sunday, April 20, 2008 6:39:54 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
O.K !!!

Thats ingenious.
its simple, stuck in the corner of our minds, unable to pinpoint.
but Craig, you struck the chord!!!

Thanks for the tip!!!
raj
Sunday, April 20, 2008 9:04:28 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
You can also follow the same settings and instructions, and use a picture that has a focus point in the center. That way when you switch between Landscape or Portrait mode, the focus point never changes. The key here is to have your desktop background adjusted to be in the "center" position. And if I may suggest, National Geographic has excellent pictures and wallpapers that will look great in your Tablet PC.

Happy Inking Everyone!
Big D
Sunday, April 20, 2008 10:59:50 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I've been doing a similar trick, but basically by resizing the image I want to use to 1400x1400 pixels and selecting stretch as the fitting mode in windows. This square image can distort freely to either 1400x1050 or 1050x1400 without losing too much. As long as the background contains no people (i tend to use architectural or more abstract photos, less distracting anyways) it doesn't matter that it is distorted, and always fills the screen nicely.
rautiocination
Sunday, April 20, 2008 4:29:33 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Glad you like it!
Sunday, April 20, 2008 5:28:13 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
The first thing I did when I got my Latitude was write a little program that sits in the status bar and changes wallpaper when i change screen orientation. It should be a standard feature.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008 3:23:47 AM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
Hello Craig,

Nice work and nice description of Snagit functionality :-)


Thursday, April 24, 2008 12:59:38 PM (Mountain Daylight Time, UTC-06:00)
I make a wallpaper that's 1280x1280 (my screen resolution is 1280x800), and don't stretch the background. That way, the wallpaper takes up either the width of the screen in landscape mode (letterboxing the tops and bottoms) and the height of the screen in portrait mode (cropping off the sides). This is fine as long as subject of the wallpaper looks ok in both orientations, bearing in mind the cropping.
Comments are closed.


       





Copyright 2008 GottaBeMobile.com
 
     

 
     
 
     
 
     
 
The vision of GottaBeMobile.com is to become the definitive source for mobile computing news, reviews, and commentary, as well as the home for the mobile community to discover and discuss these issues. When you think mobile, think GottaBeMobile.com.

The mobile computing space is one of the fastest growing and fastest changing spaces, and indeed industries worldwide. Within that constantly evolving and face paced world, GBM covers a range of spaces and technologies including Tablet PCs, UMPCs, MIDs, Ultra-portable computers, operating systems, software, natural human interfaces, accessories, mobile connectivity solutions, and other solutions that appeal to the mobile user.
     
Featured Stories
     
 
Latest GBM Shortcut Video Reviews and InkShows

 
News Categories
     
Twitter, Google Tools, etc
News Archive