This is of course a severe and very visible quality loss. It even gets worse upon sending, Outlook will convert and compress (re-render) the images to 96dpi with the new dimensions permanently! This means that all the "detailed" picture information is lost and you'll be sending an image of 96dpi which is 56px high. This means that if you have a picture of 150dpi with a height of 88px, it will be displayed as an image of 56px high ![]() When inserting a picture, Outlook will rescale the image as if it was a 96dpi image. "This issue usually happens when you are using a picture other than 96dpi. ![]() This is all based off DPI setting as well as the renderings of the Word HTML engine.īelow is snippet explaining the issue in more detail from here ![]() Outlook usually ignores whatever HTML sizing (width= or height=) or CSS styling (width:, height:) and goes off of the embedded information in teh image. Regardless of CSS support or HTML attributes, the main factor that is causing the issue in Outlook is the actual size of the image.
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June 2023
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