Export MS-Word drawings to TIFF and EPS











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I have some drawings in my docx file. These drawing were accomplished by use of MS Word 2010 win and 2011 mac drawing features.

I am now required to export them separately in TIFF and EPS format.

I have both OSX 10.9.5 and Windows 7.




How can I do this?




Your help is much appreciated.










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  • Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 7:37










  • The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 8:36















up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1












I have some drawings in my docx file. These drawing were accomplished by use of MS Word 2010 win and 2011 mac drawing features.

I am now required to export them separately in TIFF and EPS format.

I have both OSX 10.9.5 and Windows 7.




How can I do this?




Your help is much appreciated.










share|improve this question
























  • Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 7:37










  • The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 8:36













up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
1
down vote

favorite
1






1





I have some drawings in my docx file. These drawing were accomplished by use of MS Word 2010 win and 2011 mac drawing features.

I am now required to export them separately in TIFF and EPS format.

I have both OSX 10.9.5 and Windows 7.




How can I do this?




Your help is much appreciated.










share|improve this question















I have some drawings in my docx file. These drawing were accomplished by use of MS Word 2010 win and 2011 mac drawing features.

I am now required to export them separately in TIFF and EPS format.

I have both OSX 10.9.5 and Windows 7.




How can I do this?




Your help is much appreciated.







windows-7 macos microsoft-word tiff eps






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 18 '15 at 8:36

























asked May 18 '15 at 6:47









Electricman

10615




10615












  • Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 7:37










  • The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 8:36


















  • Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 7:37










  • The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 8:36
















Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
– Karan
May 18 '15 at 7:37




Just in case it is relevant, which version of Word?
– Karan
May 18 '15 at 7:37












The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
– Electricman
May 18 '15 at 8:36




The question is edited to address your comment . @Karan
– Electricman
May 18 '15 at 8:36










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote













One possible solution tested on Windows:




  1. Save document as a web page.


  2. Check the folder Name_files accompanying Name.htm and the drawings should be saved as PNG files.


  3. Convert to whichever formats you want.







share|improve this answer





















  • Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 9:09












  • Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 17:31


















up vote
0
down vote














  1. Group the drawings and copy it.


  2. Open power point and past it in a blank layout.


  3. Right click and select save as picture and select .tif and save.



If you want to save as EPS format you can follow these links and give it a try.



Note: I have not tested.



MacPPT: How to Export PowerPoint Slides to EPS Format



Saving EPS files from Powerpoint






share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    up vote
    0
    down vote













    One possible solution tested on Windows:




    1. Save document as a web page.


    2. Check the folder Name_files accompanying Name.htm and the drawings should be saved as PNG files.


    3. Convert to whichever formats you want.







    share|improve this answer





















    • Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
      – Electricman
      May 18 '15 at 9:09












    • Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
      – Karan
      May 18 '15 at 17:31















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    One possible solution tested on Windows:




    1. Save document as a web page.


    2. Check the folder Name_files accompanying Name.htm and the drawings should be saved as PNG files.


    3. Convert to whichever formats you want.







    share|improve this answer





















    • Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
      – Electricman
      May 18 '15 at 9:09












    • Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
      – Karan
      May 18 '15 at 17:31













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    One possible solution tested on Windows:




    1. Save document as a web page.


    2. Check the folder Name_files accompanying Name.htm and the drawings should be saved as PNG files.


    3. Convert to whichever formats you want.







    share|improve this answer












    One possible solution tested on Windows:




    1. Save document as a web page.


    2. Check the folder Name_files accompanying Name.htm and the drawings should be saved as PNG files.


    3. Convert to whichever formats you want.








    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered May 18 '15 at 8:45









    Karan

    48.7k1486156




    48.7k1486156












    • Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
      – Electricman
      May 18 '15 at 9:09












    • Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
      – Karan
      May 18 '15 at 17:31


















    • Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
      – Electricman
      May 18 '15 at 9:09












    • Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
      – Karan
      May 18 '15 at 17:31
















    Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 9:09






    Well, That kills the quality and also it arises another question regarding to converting PNG to TIFF. As a matter of fact I can select the gropued drawing and copy it. Then in special paste I select meta file. this makes the drawing so good like a normal picture, but still I don't know how to export it as TIFF or EPS. @karan
    – Electricman
    May 18 '15 at 9:09














    Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 17:31




    Quality seems to be fine here; I'm not seeing a noticeable difference. PNG to TIFF/EPS can be accomplished by any number of free utilities with minimal loss. Direct export to TIFF/EPS might not be possible but I'll edit the answer if I find anything.
    – Karan
    May 18 '15 at 17:31












    up vote
    0
    down vote














    1. Group the drawings and copy it.


    2. Open power point and past it in a blank layout.


    3. Right click and select save as picture and select .tif and save.



    If you want to save as EPS format you can follow these links and give it a try.



    Note: I have not tested.



    MacPPT: How to Export PowerPoint Slides to EPS Format



    Saving EPS files from Powerpoint






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote














      1. Group the drawings and copy it.


      2. Open power point and past it in a blank layout.


      3. Right click and select save as picture and select .tif and save.



      If you want to save as EPS format you can follow these links and give it a try.



      Note: I have not tested.



      MacPPT: How to Export PowerPoint Slides to EPS Format



      Saving EPS files from Powerpoint






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote










        1. Group the drawings and copy it.


        2. Open power point and past it in a blank layout.


        3. Right click and select save as picture and select .tif and save.



        If you want to save as EPS format you can follow these links and give it a try.



        Note: I have not tested.



        MacPPT: How to Export PowerPoint Slides to EPS Format



        Saving EPS files from Powerpoint






        share|improve this answer













        1. Group the drawings and copy it.


        2. Open power point and past it in a blank layout.


        3. Right click and select save as picture and select .tif and save.



        If you want to save as EPS format you can follow these links and give it a try.



        Note: I have not tested.



        MacPPT: How to Export PowerPoint Slides to EPS Format



        Saving EPS files from Powerpoint







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered May 18 '15 at 9:16









        PHJCJO

        1362




        1362






























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