13 Production Essentials. Chapter 13 Objectives Differentiate between continuous tone and vector artwork. Use the mighty Links panel Adjust image resolution.

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Presentation transcript:

13 Production Essentials

Chapter 13 Objectives Differentiate between continuous tone and vector artwork. Use the mighty Links panel Adjust image resolution for optimal printing Find and replace fonts Use Separations and Overprint Preview Perform document preflight and package operations

Color Review Why can’t you usually trust the color you view on your computer monitor? What is the difference between process and spot color? What is an undefined color? What is a mixed ink group?

Continuous tone art Has shades and tones. It’s created with pencil, charcoal, photography, watercolor, etc. Line art Solid image. No shading. It’s created with ink, technical pen, vector drawing programs such as Illustrator.

Digital photography is composed of pixels (picture elements). When an image is enlarged, the pixels also increase in size. These images are called “raster” or “bitmap” images. They are resolution dependent, which means the image quality changes as the image size changes.

Vector images are created by mathematical formulas. Vector images are resolution independent, which means they always look great, no matter what size they are!

Resolution is a term that refers to the number of pixels in a square inch of an image. More pixels = more detail. Use high resolution images at actual size (100%) in InDesign! Low resolution image, enlarged High resolution image, 100%

The Links Panel The Links panel (shown right) has been customized to display a variety of information. Columns from left to right: Name of link Status Page File Size Color space Scale Actual PPI Effective PPI The Link info pane (lower half) displays additional information.

A powerful production tool! The Links panel displays a warning in the status column when a link needs attention. The red circle with a question mark means the link is missing.

Package your document! When a document is packaged, all the fonts and images are organized into tidy folders. If there are problems, you will be alerted with a yellow warning triangle.

Summary Use high resolution images at their actual size. Use Photoshop to resize placed images so that their scale is 100% in InDesign. Always package your documents. Use Find Font to find and replace missing typefaces. Fonts with the same name, but from different manufacturers, can be quite different, as shown in the samples below. Always send your document’s fonts to the printer!