While this allows me to get rid of jpeg compression artefacts, the image file is way too small in resolution to look any good in print. The only way I found to make it stop creating this file, is use a very small image to begin with. Regardless of whether the signature in Word uses a JPG or a PNG image, Outlook always generates a compressed jpeg to use instead. This works alright, except for the fact that it compresses the living bits out of the image, and I'm trying to find a solution for that.Īs soon as the signature is saved in Outlook, inside of "%appdata%\Microsoft\Signatures\" I see two files being created for one image - one an original file, another a compressed copy of it that's actually being used when sending e-mails. Since we don't have that many employees here, and the signature does not change very often, there's no centralised deployment of signatures here - I simply open the Word file with a signature inside on a target machine and copy-paste it to Outlook. It consists of some text, hyperlinks, horizontal line and an image. I have an e-mail signature, which has been prepared in MSO Word 2013.
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