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I am also lost in this stupid bug or whatever it is. I know the resolution of the screen and I download wallpaper that fits its size and then it gives me small box to cutoff the wallpaper !? WTF ? If I have exactly right dimension that fits the screen why do I need to take just a pice of the photo and then get worse detailed photo on the screen ??
 
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Busha, I don't think you read JDWans post. When you select an image for a background wallpaper it will always give you the option to crop it further if you want. If you drag the "little box" at the corner you can scale the box to be the size of the wallpaper you have. If your wallpaper is the correct aspect ratio ( a multiple of 960*854) then you should be able to scale the box to fill the whole image. The wallpaper size is pretty square but not quite.
 
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Just one problem... you say that the total image size of the xperia x10 wallpaper, taking into account that it scrolls left and right, is 960 x 854 pixels.. The problem will come when we finally get to upgrade to Android 2.?..... because we will then have 5 home screens instead of 3. scroll 2 right and 2 left.
 
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You need to create a document that is 854 pixels high by about 480 pixels wide in photoshop or a similar program.
Add your image into this space.
Then increase the canvas size to 960 pixels and repeat the background of your image so it now fills up the rest of the space. This retains your image on the first screen and then repeats over the background of the image on the other screens.
 
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You need to create a document that is 854 pixels high by about 480 pixels wide in photoshop or a similar program.
Add your image into this space.
Then increase the canvas size to 960 pixels and repeat the background of your image so it now fills up the rest of the space. This retains your image on the first screen and then repeats over the background of the image on the other screens.
It's simpler to create an 960x854 to begin with as it's easier to position the new image you're putting in to it.
 
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You can do it that way but i prefer to create the box size first and expand it.
I wouldnt say your way is simplier as its only a case of going to canvas size in photoshop and changing the sum from 480 to 960 once you are happy with your image. I just created myself a new one earlier and it only took me a few minutes. Dont see how it could be any simpler then that?
If you create it full size straight away you will have to still measure out 480 pixels and make sure its aligned to the horizontal centre. If you have text or something like that in the image that you dont want spilling over into the other screens just guessing would result in it not being totally inside that area and so you would end up going back and fourth to get it right.
 
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No worries. Was just trying to give some general advise to anyone using the three screen default setup.
If it was done outside of photoshop then your method would probably be easier.
Im a designer and so i use photoshop and illustrator on a daily basis, i understand that not everyone has these programs but they are quite common.

By doing it in two stage i was making it clear, or trying to, that you cant just do an image by 960 pixels wide and expect to see the whole image on your first screen.
What you see in the 480 pixels section will be your front screen and then the overlap is a bleed of 240 pixels both sides.
 
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the problem here folks is this:

the x10 has a resolution of 480x864. BUT when you want a wallpaper, that image spans across 3 screens, hence the resolution of your image must be 960x854 pixels

Really - 480 x 3 = 1440 (guess your calculations are wrong - besides -bearing in mind that when you switch from 1 screen to another with either a left or right swipe, the background NEVER moves the entire width of the screen - it always just moves slightly - ALTHOUGH +1 that the dimensions are actually correct

You need to create a document that is 854 pixels high by about 480 pixels wide in photoshop or a similar program.
Add your image into this space.
Then increase the canvas size to 960 pixels and repeat the background of your image so it now fills up the rest of the space. This retains your image on the first screen and then repeats over the background of the image on the other screens.

Really - tried this and well - the results were astoundingly bad - care to post an image showing how you do it

You can do it that way but i prefer to create the box size first and expand it.
I wouldnt say your way is simplier as its only a case of going to canvas size in photoshop and changing the sum from 480 to 960 once you are happy with your image. I just created myself a new one earlier and it only took me a few minutes. Dont see how it could be any simpler then that?
If you create it full size straight away you will have to still measure out 480 pixels and make sure its aligned to the horizontal centre. If you have text or something like that in the image that you dont want spilling over into the other screens just guessing would result in it not being totally inside that area and so you would end up going back and fourth to get it right.

god man have you EVER used photoshop - like EVER!!!!

its always easier to create the canvas and then paste your images into it - because doesn't expanding actually mean you stretch the image therefore losing dimensions ??
 
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Use it daily thanks Mr Womble.
Hopefully you are understanding that the canvas size and image size are two different things altogether?
You create a new image, making it 854 high x 480 wide. This gives you your first screen.
Drag out two guides and mark the edges of this. Then go to image, canvas size and change the canvas size to 960 pixels wide with the anchor points set centrally.
Add your image into the points between the guides.

The people asking were obviously having the problem of their image stretching over three screens, where as they wanted the image to appear just on the first screen.

And also the resolution of 480 works just fine for background images. 480 for the front screen and it will only spill half way for the screens each side of that. 480 + 240 +240=960.
 
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Ok i re-read your post Mr Womble and yes you are confusing canvas size and image size.
If you took an image that was 480 wide and expanded it by going to image size and set it to not constrain the size and stretched it to 960 yes it would mess up your image.
By going to canvas size all it does is increase the work area, it doesnt effect your layers. If you made this smaller obviously your image would disappear off the page. If you made it bigger you get more room to add stuff to.
If you give me your image I will turn it into a working background.
You also created the question about 480 x 3 =1440 and answered it yourself.
 
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