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CS5.5 ePub export uses low-res image proxies in some cases

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    • #60590
      David Gray
      Participant

      Has anyone else noticed that the InDesign CS5.5 ePub export exports the low-res proxy image for 72-dpi JPEGs if Image > Preserve Appearance from Layout IS checked . . . unless you set View > Display Performance > High Quality Display *before* importing a JPEG?

      The proxy image is the low-res preview that ID displays onscreen for placed graphics. It's much rougher than a 72 dpi JPEG would normally be if generated during the ePub export.

      I did not see this behavior in CS3 and CS4.

      If Image > Preserve Appearance from Layout is NOT checked, image quality is fine (though of course you lose any cropping, etc. done in the ID layout).

      This seems like a bug.

      Image below shows different results from ePub export with identical export settings (including Image > Preserve Appearance from Layout CHECKED). Only difference:

      LEFT: View > Display Performance > Typical Display [default setting]

      RIGHT: View > Display Performance > High Quality Display (set right before import).

      Note: Images imported with View > Display Performance > High Quality Display will STILL export the poor-quality proxy image if the document is closed, then reopened. You have to re-import the graphic with View > Display Performance > High Quality Display again before exporting to get the good-quality, non-proxy JPEG.

      Example

    • #60602

      I'm sorry, but if you're seeing very different results in your images, then there must be something else going on — the images you export in an EPUB are not affected by the preview/proxy quality you choose in InDesign. I(And honestly, I can't tell from your screenshot which one is supposed to be worse or better than the other, though it might just be my old eyeballs… heh.)

      I can't duplicate your results. I placed the same high quality image 3 times into 3 separate files, and exported each to EPUB with the same image settings and same scaling applied. Before I exported, I changed the Display Performance preview for each one, so EPUB1 used Typical, EPUB2 used High Quality, and EPUB3 used Fast (just a solid gray preview).

      All images looked the same in my epub reader, and after extracting them from the epubs, each one was the exact same size (15.1 MB).

      ?

      AM

    • #60604
      David Gray
      Participant

      Hi Anne-Marie. Did your test use these settings in the ePub export:

      – 72 dpi

      – Image > Preserve Appearance from Layout?

    • #60629

      I used the default settings of 150 ppi and Image > Preserve Appearance from Layout.

    • #60632

      I can see the difference between the two images. It's subtle, but you can see it, particularly on the grey text at the bottom ('CLEVELAND'S FAVORITE PRIVATE EYE').

    • #60633
      David Gray
      Participant

      This happens when the original image is a 72-dpi image.

    • #60728
      David Gray
      Participant

      More info: I determined that this problem occurs when image is:

      – JPEG

      – an ODD number of pixels wide

      This seems related to ID's resizing bug/feature related to 72 ppi images with EVEN number of pixels, discussed here:

      https://forums.adobe.com/messag…..04#1291804

      It does indeed seem related to ID's use of the ID-generated 72 ppi proxy image instead of the original 72 ppi JPEG.

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