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I have been using Outlook 2007 for over a year with no image problems. Around September 1st, images that I paste into messages are enlarged in the messages.

  1. This happends with WinSnap, the Vista Snipping Tool, or any jpeg pasted into the message
  2. I tried jpegs with 96dpi settings w/o sucess
  3. I tried different Outlook Format Picture ... and Size ... settings
  4. Problem happens with both RTF and HTML messages
  5. Attached images are ok

Something mysteriously changed and I cannot figure it out. I googled this to death without any success (others have the problem but there is no solution). This is driving me nuts because I snap screenshots all day long ("a picture is worth a thousand words").

Thanks in advance.

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  • What happens if you use another snipping tool? e.g. Fastone Capture (aplusfreeware.com/categories/mmedia/FastStoneCapture.html)
    – pelms
    Sep 26, 2009 at 19:59
  • I have tried two different snip tools. The problem also happens when I simply copy in an image (e.g., like from a web page). Sep 30, 2009 at 0:42
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    The same thing has happened to me. It doesn't matter if I paste the image into the e-mail or if I load it from a file into the e-mail. Totally annoying. Sep 30, 2009 at 17:33
  • I incidentally solved this problem for now by repaving the machine and loading windows 7. I hope it does not come back. If it happens again I will try uninstalling and reinstalling outlook. Oct 27, 2009 at 14:45
  • @Jersey Dude - it would help others if you accepted @datatoo's answer showing that this fixed your problem.
    – ChrisF
    Nov 19, 2009 at 13:50

8 Answers 8

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If Outlook is using Word as the editor check that you have not inadvertently set zoom to larger than 100%. If you have, it will continue to use that size.

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  • 2
    This mystery of this problem is now solved. I realized that I had accidently rolled the mouse wheel in the Compose window yesterday afternoon. Apparently, this has the same affect as rolling the mouse wheel in Internet Explorer: it changes the view % to enlarge or shrink your view. The difference from IE is that the compose window does not show the percentage anywhere so you do not necessarily realize what you have done (I had thought the larger font was used by the person that sent the original message). @datatoo was correct. Nov 19, 2009 at 13:37
  • Here is how to reset the zoom, if needed support.office.com/en-us/article/…
    – KAE
    Oct 13, 2016 at 20:25
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I was having the same problem and tried all of the above before I realized that the message has to be scaled to 100% BEFORE you paste in the image.

I had tried pasting an image and tried CTRL-Scroll-wheel to try to find the right zoom level, but that didn't work. So I triekd scroll up/down a notch before pasting until I got the right zoom level for the image to be pasted in clearly. What a wacky problem. Thanks for the hints and hope this additional hint helps someone else out. Outlook 2007.

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This is due to Text size settings in Windows which affects the DPI at which text is rendered. Don't know why this affects images as well. But right click your image, click size and position and set the image size to 80% and voila! Pixel perfect!

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Hold Ctrl & move your mouse button up/down. This will resize the image in Outlook.

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I'm having the same issue with Outlook 2010, but sadly this is not a fix. Holding CTRL & rolling the the mouse to zoom is a good fix, if you don't want to be able to read the message! This zooms the entire message, not just the image. How hard can it be to email a screen shot in Outlook 2007/2010?

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I've had better luck pasting in a high resolution image (say 300pdi) and reducing its size if necessary. Outlook will still lower the resolution (and quality) even if you don't, but the final result is sharper than inserting the image at the resolution/size you want it.

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Paul-Sebastian is correct. Change the Windows screen DPI setting. Rigt-click on the screen. Select 'personalize'. Click on 'Display', then select 'smaller 100%' and click on 'Apply'. Log-off windows and log back on. Now image pastes correctly into Outlook.

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For me, it was the text format in the email that was making the file size HUGE. Go to the Format Text tab and change the format to HTML, as sending it as Rich Text was causing the problem.

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