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David BlatnerKeymasterDoes it have to be a table? I have a solution using Data Merge and inline objects that would be far easier.
David BlatnerKeymasterAre you talking about on screen or on final export?
Remember that JPEG is a lossy format, so you will get some jags and blurriness when you save from Photoshop as JPEG, and if you then export a PDF, it may downsample and re-jpeg the images, depending on your export settings.
David BlatnerKeymasterTake a look at world tools from in-tools.com?
David BlatnerKeymasterIt’s hard to know with these very tiny changes; usually comes down to rounding errors. It’s possible that something changed in Photoshop CC, though I haven’t heard that.
I do know that many people get better results by exporting PDF from InDesign and then opening (rasterizing) that PDF in Photoshop (instead of exporting jpeg from ID). Try that?
The next issue of InDesign Magazine (December) is all about InDesign for photographers, including information about making albums!
David BlatnerKeymasterSounds like a job for Layout Adjustment
https://creativepro.com/resizing-document-pages.php
or
https://creativepro.com/convert-portrait-to-landscape-with-layout-adjustment.phpIf the frames don’t touch the margins, then Repeat After Me:
https://creativepro.com/repeat-supercharges-production-single-step-action.php
David BlatnerKeymaster
David BlatnerKeymasterWeb (html) forms are going to be more flexible and easy for people to fill out, if they are online. You could use PDF forms for almost everything you might use html forms for, but of course people need to use a PDF reader to fill them out.
David BlatnerKeymasterNot sure anything needs to be fixed. When you opened the 2nd document, did the Links panel show any art as missing?
InDesign actually remembers what folders you’ve relinked to recently. So after you found the art in the first document, it probably automatically “found” it when you opened the 2nd document.
However, it may not SAVE that new information in the 2nd document. So you may need to open each document, do something small, then save the document. Not sure if that will help, but it might.
David BlatnerKeymasterIf you’re on a Mac, I strongly suggest getting a copy of Default Folder. It makes handling folder stuff like this far easier. Ultimately, though, you just need to be aware of where files are being saved.
David BlatnerKeymasterYou need to check in Acrobat? Or InDesign? You should be able to use the Separation Preview panel in InDesign, or the Output Preview panel in Acrobat to check tints and colors.
November 11, 2013 at 12:08 pm in reply to: Is 1o the max numbers of pages you can have side by side? #66149
David BlatnerKeymasterI believe that 10 really is the limit, unfortunately.
David BlatnerKeymasterWhat epub reader are you using on the ipad?
David BlatnerKeymasterI think you’d just have to use the Find/Change feature to search and replace text. You could do a whole bunch of them in one go using the findchangebylist script (search our site for info about this) or the Multi Find Change plug-in from automatication.com
David BlatnerKeymasterWell, it could be how you’re printing it then. Your printer, your printer driver, the print settings. InDesign itself doesn’t degrade images. It’s just a holder, a page, it doesn’t touch your image itself except when printing or exporting.
David BlatnerKeymasterInDesign should not degrade the image… but when you create a PDF out of InDesign, it might. Check the compression settings! Make sure the resolution is high enough, the compression is set to Maximum quality (or use Zip, which does not degrade at all).
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