Abhumans a go-go

carsjr

Member
I apologize for the pix, as I'm kinda new to inserting from an image hosting site. They look a bit distorted and blurry here, I'm not sure how to fix that.
I apparently have an ogryn/ogre problem. I'f it's wrong, I don't want to be right.....









 

Gallivantes

Member
Hey carsjr. Awesome seeing all these ogryns en masse :grin:


Got a solution for you with the image ratios here. When you use the img2 tag to resize an image, the (height)x(width) numbers need to correspond to the proportions of the original image in order to retain the height/width ratio.

Example: Using your own first image in this post, I examined it to find the original resolution being 3223x1760. Dividing both numbers with the same factor gives me another set, for example dividing by 4 gives me 806x440. I am displaying your image here with those numbers.



So why divide by 4 in this case? Well, you can use any numbers as long as their proportions are retained, although obviously this will result in an infinite number of varying sizes ranging from super tiny to super large :) In this particular case I started from reasoning that a width of around 800 pixels could be a good ballpark number. Dividing the original width by 800 (3223/800) gave me a result of 4.08275, from there I decided for simplicity's sake that dividing heigth and width by 4 would get me close enough. (3223x1760) / 4 = (806x440)

You don't have to calculate it this way if you don't have a specific target height or width in mind. To illustrate another example you could look at the original resolution of 3223x1760 and probably see without a calculator that, divided by ten 10 we would get 322x176, which would display your image as such. Small, but proportions retained:



A bit too small probably, so we could double that into 644x352 and see this:



Bottom line is that as long as you retain the original image ratio in the numbers it will look right, but you have to input those numbers yourself in the img2 tag. And you will need to find out what resolution your original images are to do this. There are tons of different ways to do that, all depending on what operating system/software you are using, so I won't go into specifics. But if you are having trouble finding out it would generally be a matter of examining the properties/info of the file.

Hope that helps!
 

Tanath

Member
The old Bob Olley Ogres still hold up really well after all these years. Really nice paint jobs on those mate :)
 

carsjr

Member
Tanath":2anlw7wq said:
The old Bob Olley Ogres still hold up really well after all these years. Really nice paint jobs on those mate :)

Thanks!
I agree, I love those Olley Ogres too. The big toothy grins, the ropey anatomy, everything.
 

Orjetax

Member
Great work.

If that's wrong, I don't want you to be right either.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

ogryn

Member
Its ok to have an ogre problem.
Maybe we should start club or something.
"hi my name is ogryn, and I have an ogre collecting problem"
 
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