![]() ![]() The role of the designer will be to provide visual harmony to the design to facilitate the reading of the end user. The selection of the correct photographs that will accompany the text is an art that is in charge of the editor of the publication. What are the 5 Key Elements of a Magazine Layout Design in Adobe InDesign? 1. That’s where this article comes in: We’ve gathered 15 Free Magazine Templates for InDesign that you can download and use right away. In that case, you might need to create a magazine from scratch. But InDesign doesn’t always have what you’re looking for. I can import PDFs from a client just fine, but when *I* make the PDF (via Distiller) of that PDF and then try to re-import it (process, not my idea), the size goes all bonkers and I have to futz with it.Ĭan anyone help me troubleshoot this issue? I saw on another thread on this forum that this is a known bug, and that there was a fix in the 6.0.4 update however, we have 6.0.4 and it’s not fixed, and I have no idea when we’re going to get 6.0.5.When designers need a magazine template, they usually turn to InDesign’s built-in templates. I don’t know where I need to go to make Acrobat, InDesign, WHOMEVER give me the Trim option. Kind of defeats the purpose of a template. If the art needs to be relinked, it comes in at the wrong size. We had a lot of client templates set up in CS3 to import art to Trim now that we’ve converted to CS4, “import to Trim” is greyed out on ALL of the templates (over 100). ![]() So I’ve been banging my head against this issue for a couple weeks now, and I’m afraid it’s about to come to a head for our next print run. ![]() In saying that, I had an A4 sized pdf print job come back printed at A6 size today, so who knows what they’re thinking or doing at print/publishing places :) They print it the way they get it, because if they don’t they could be in trouble if there are any mistakes. I’ve even made phone-calls, sent email confirmation etc., of changes that I would allow them to do, but they will never touch a print-ready pdf to change anything. I know it’s not helpful, but it might give you an understanding of why they won’t change the pdf import options – simply because if the job is botched you could easily blame it on them for the mistake, and printers won’t like to be blamed for something that a customer told them to do – trust me I’ve heard it happens. The fact remains it would have been quicker had I spotted the spot colour before I sent it. But the point of a PDF is that it’s print-ready so they can’t touch it. It would have been quicker for them to make the change. I had to resend it, and it took a while to (-FTP-). I accidentally left a spot colour in a pdf and they wouldn’t even map it to cmyk. (The odd time that I need changes made in a hurry, it’s always needed in a hurry, isn’t it :) ) ![]() Pepper, I get that with print/publishing places, they won’t touch the PDF that you’ve sent in, even if you tell them to. Var cropValues = įor (var j = cropValues.length – 1 j >= 0 j–) // CS2 includes beep() function.Įxit() // CS exits with a beep CS2 exits silently. +++++++ Functions Start Here +++++++++++++++++++++++Īpp.userInteractionLevel = UserInteractionLevels.interactWithAll Īpp.erInteractionLevel = UserInteractionLevels.interactWithAll If ( > 0) ().destroy() ĬurSetting = Īpp.pdfPlacePreferences.pdfCrop = userChooses This script must not be distributed without first obtaining written permission of: DESCRIPTION: Allows user to change PDF-import cropping preference Super Script Man to the rescue! The following script (which might be garbled by this interface) can be downloaded from: ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |