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STAGE 5 / Printing InDesign Files


                 Although the PDF format is the de facto standard for submitting files to a commercial printer, you will
                 still need to output printed proofs at some point in your career, whether to show a hard copy to a client
                 or to simply review a document’s content away from a monitor. Creating those proofs requires a basic
                 understanding of how software and hardware translate what you see on screen to ink on paper.
                    For a printer to output high-quality pages from Adobe InDesign, some method of defining the
                 page and its elements is required. These definitions are provided by Page Description Languages
                 (PDLs), the most widely used of which is Adobe PostScript 3.
                    When a file is output to a PostScript-enabled device, the raster image processor (RIP) creates a
                 file that includes mathematical descriptions detailing the construction and placement of the various
                 page elements; the print file precisely maps the location of each pixel on the page. In the printer, the
                 RIP then interprets the description of each element into a matrix of ones (black) and zeros (white).
                 The output device uses this matrix to reconstruct the element as a series of individual dots or spots
                 that form a high-resolution bitmap image on film or paper.
                    Not every printer on the market is capable of interpreting PostScript information. Low-cost,
                 consumer-level inkjet printers, common in the modern graphic design market, are generally not
                 PostScript compatible. (Some desktop printers can handle PostScript, at least with an additional
                 purchase; consult the technical documentation that came with your printer to make certain it can
                 print PostScript information.) If your printer is non-PostScript compatible, some features in the
                 InDesign Print dialog box will be unavailable, and some page elements (particularly EPS files) might
                 not output as expected.
                    If you do not have a PostScript output device, you can work around the problem by first
                 exporting your InDesign files to PDF (see Project 2: Festival Poster) and then opening the PDFs in
                 Acrobat to print a proof. This is a common workflow solution in the current graphic design industry.



                       Print a Sample Proof
                 In general, every job you create will be printed at some point in the workflow —
                 whether for your own review, as a client comp, or as a final proof to accompany a file
                 to the commercial printer. So, whether you need a basic proof or a final job proof,
                 you should still understand what is possible in the InDesign Print dialog box.
                    Composite proofs print all colors on the same sheet, which allows you to judge
                 page geometry and the overall positioning of elements. Final composite proofs   Note:
                 provided to the printer should include registration marks (special printer’s marks
                 used to check the alignment of individual inks when the job is printed), and they   It is also important to
                 should always be output at 100% size.                                          realize that desktop
                                                                                                inkjet and laser printers
                   1.  With gcm-letterhead.indd open, choose File>Print.                        typically do not accu-

                      The Print dialog box includes dozens of options in eight different categories.   rately represent color.
                      The most important options you’ll select are the Printer and PPD (PostScript printer
                      description) at the top of the dialog box. InDesign reads the information in the PPD
                      to determine which of the specific print options are available for the current output.

                   2.  Choose the printer you want to use in the Printer menu, and choose the
                      PPD for that printer in the PPD menu (if possible).






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