However, once I selected my new desktop image I noticed a problem. See the majestic trees on the left monitor? They're supposed to be on the far right of the right monitor, which is also the main display monitor. This is certainly a problem.
I knew that my monitor-spanning image's 'Picture position' had to be set to tile in 'Control Panel\Appearance and Personalization\Personalization\Desktop Background' so I did some searching using terms such as 'tiling wrong way' and tiling 'right to left' and eventually came across a post like this one that revealed the underlying issue: Windows starts drawing the image in the top left of the primary display then wraps to the other displays.
With this knowledge I realized that I was going to have to use Paint.Net to resolve the matter.
The first step was to break up my 3840 x 1080 image into two equal distinct images. Following these steps from the Paint.Net forum I was able to produce two 1920 x 1080 images.
- Open original source image
- Click on Image > Canvas Size
- Uncheck Maintain aspect ratio CheckBox
- Set pixel size to 1920 width, leaving height as is
- Set Anchor to Top Left
- Save this half of the photo, naming 'left', '1', or whatever you choose
- Click undo, to undo the canvas size and repeat for the right half or reopening the source image and repeat, using 'Top Right' for step 5
- Open the image that you want to appear on the left monitor first
- Image > Canvas Size
- Uncheck Maintain aspect ratio CheckBox
- Set Anchor to Top Right
- Double the width (in my case I changed 1920 to 3840)
- Import the image that you want to appear on the right monitor by using Layers > Import From File (by default this image's anchor is top left
- Save this new file
Yes.
Clearly this solution is not applicable to all monitor configurations, but it should give you an idea of how to solve this problem.
It's unfortunate that it has to come to this but this is amazing and will work perfectly.
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