Thread:RomGuyony/@comment-27155998-20151221141548/@comment-26249703-20160109101820

Well, my method is the same until after converting them to .png (using PVRTexTool).

Then this is where it gets complicated:

Not having access to Photoshop at home, I opened the picture in MS Paint to get some details about each picture (Pixels, DPI, Size (cms)), then use the .atlas files to know where each logo is positioned, on top of its size.

Then, using MS PP (not the most adequate tool, but does have a cropping tool that just uses values), I could use the size in cms to make the adjustments.

I had a few method iterations. As previously mentioned, I noticed that adding the picture to the slide reduced its size as a percentage of the original picture, so I scaled it back to 100% of the original picture. I was converting pixels to cms for each value, which led to a few pictures being a slightly different size due to rounding errors.

I was working on scaling the pictures to use a factor of the pixel values as a cms (1280x720 becoming 12.8x7.2 cms) before scaling them back to 100% of the original picture when I realised that altough the size was accurate, the resolution was actually bigger than the measurements in the .atlas files (although the non-cropped picture isn't).

That is why I retrospectively admitted there was something wrong with my process, but I can't put my finger on what.