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Gert Verrept
MemberNot quite, you cannot type anything in the text frame, you allways have to type in it the change field. This works fine for a few changes, but for several dozens of changes on hundred or more pages it's far too slow.
g.
Gert Verrept
MemberThnkx a lot, Jongware. I figured he first part out too (setting the Underline) underlines the whole thing.
Making a para style with nested styles didn't work out, because some digits don't need underline, those which are not followed by (vroeger art….). So thankx again for the quick answer and solution.
June 4, 2012 at 10:57 am in reply to: Professionaly Printing: What are Paper Types 1, 2 and 3? #62346Gert Verrept
MemberThe iso standard for printing refers to paper type 1,2 …. For most of the paper types, ICC profiles are made, so that printing on them will always give the same result.
Paper Type 1 is typically a higher brightness coated stock and may be used for most magazine stocks printed sheet-fed, as well as the higher brightness web offset stocks.
Paper Type 3 is typically a mid to high brightness coated stock, generally with a lower mass per area weight (gsm).
Paper Type 4 is typically a higher brightness uncoated stock.Gert Verrept
MemberMayoor,
For Europe we use ECI coated V2 profile for CMYK offset printing. If you are sure that there's no bleed than you don't have to include them.
gert
Gert Verrept
MemberGert Verrept
MemberI have the same problem on our OCE printers. Why it happens, no idea. The fix (or workaround), I use pitstop to change black to “device gray” this way:
– Open the ‘Remap Colors’ Global Change
– Choose Color from the first dropdown menu
– Choose User Swatch from the second
– Click on the color pick Icon
– Choose the Black Spot Color from the Document Spot Colors
– Choose color in the dropdown menu under ‘to’
– Choose Device Gray as color space and 0 as brightness
– Save and Run the Global Change
It works fine for us, so maybe you can give it a try.
Gert Verrept
Member“Edit” menu –> keyb shortcuts –> select in “product area” “scripts” choose your own shortcut –> assign –> save
Gert Verrept
MemberWell,
Grayscale images are images with tints of black. This means that you cannot add another color to them directly, because the color in the pics is either white or black. Indesign doesn't convert the pics. In photoshop you could convert them to duo tones (black and cyan) and print them in that way.
gert
Gert Verrept
MemberCollywolly,
I use pitstop pro a lot merely for changing rgb to cmyk, repositioning figures, etc.
Actions lists are used to put headers or footers to big files (ex 500 pages with awrong footer).
What I don't like about PP10 (and earlier) is that you always have to save the action list or each time make a duplicate.
gert
Gert Verrept
MemberStephane,
In stead of doing it in CS, create some small macro's in Word asigning char styles in MSWord to italic, bold etc. If you give them the same names as the ones you create in CS, there's no problem anymore. You can apply a parastyle and the italics will stay as char styles.
gert
Gert Verrept
MemberGert Verrept
MemberThe're 2 backslaches before the “(” and one before “d”. In the mean while I found the error, the 2 backslashes have to be after the “(” and at the end of that line I had to delete the 2 backslashes too.
Thnks for the help
gert
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