How to Plan For Perfect Color Printing
One of the most common issues with professional printing is sending your printer graphics files that is in the wrong color space. Here's what you need to remember about color before you send your file to your printer.CMYK not RGB
Your computer uses a color space called RGB to produce the colors you see on your screen. A printing press uses a color space called CMYK to produce similar colors using just four colors of ink: cyan, magenta, yellow and black, also know as 4 color process. When you send your files to a commercial printer, they must be in the CYMK color space.
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Spot Colors
Most of the colors produced in color printing are created by blending just 4 colors of ink: cyan, magenta, yellow and black. But sometimes you need a very specific color. Despite all of the advanced techniques and technology at a professional printer, matching the exact color from printer to printer and even from one order to the next can be a challenge. Consistent color-matching is what separates good printers from great ones.Speciality inks like metallics, neons and unique colors will also have to be run as spot colors.
Planning Image Quality for Professional Printing
Low quality and low resolution images produce terrible, ugly, hideous printing but many people don't understand the relationship between quality and resolution. You must plan for your final output at the beginning of your design, otherwise you'll be left with an unusable final product.How to Resample Images for Printing
Resizing images can lead to problems when they are printed because the resolution can be unintentionally changed.
How to Resample Images in InDesign
Sometimes you may want to resample an image to change the size that it will print. If you are downsampling, for example, resampling can make the image take up less space. In InDesign, make sure the Resample Image option is checked when you change the size of an image. It is checked by default. When Resample is checked, you change the data in the image when you up or downsample the image.- Changing pixel dimensions changes the physical size but not the resolution.
- Changing resolution affects the pixel density but not the physical size.
- Changing the physical size changes the pixel density but not resolution.
Changing an Image Without Resampling
When you uncheck the Resample Image box, the amount of data in the image is unchanged even when you change the size of the image. This has the effect of changing the pixels per inch (PPI) of your image. For commercial printing, you want a rather high PPI value.- For printing purposes you want 300 PPI or greater.
Which Image Formats Are Best For Printing?
When sending press ready design files to a printer you should send your images in the highest quality (not fastest) image format possible. Different image formats compress image data differently. PNG and TIFF images work the best for most print projects. JPG images work Ok at 100% quality, but every time the JPG is saved it is recompressed, so the quality can drop quickly if it is saved often at less than maximum quality.
When Are Vector Images Important for Printing?
Most images are created using a bitmap, or series of dots, and are called raster images. Vector images are not made of dots, but a shape plotted by points along a mathematically generated path. Vector images can change to any size without losing quality. Popular vector image formats are AI, SVG and EPS formats. When you are printing commercially, vector images are very important.- Your text should always be in a vector format.
- Line drawings, such as plans or blueprints, should always be in vector format.
- Logos work best in a vector format.
Tips for Designing Great Images for Print
When possible, do the following:- Do not upsample your images.
- Make sure your images are at least 300 PPI (or 300-600 DPI).
- Use vector formats for text, line art and logos.
What Are Bleeds? Why are Bleeds Important?
A bleed is printed content that extends beyond the trimmed edge of your final printed piece. Bleeds are important because they allow your artwork to be cut without artifacts. If there is no bleed you may have a small white space around the cut edge. The bleed should be 0.25" larger than the trim size (0.125" on all sides). Learn more about bleed. You should design your project within the trim size and add bleed settings in InDesign.How do You Design for Folds?
If you are printing brochures, catalogs, folded cards, or boxes you'll need to plan for folds.
- Use guides and the ruler to measure exactly where the fold will happen. Plan your artwork and design accordingly.
- Consider the thickness of your paper and the types of coatings and effects on your finished product, you may need to adjust where folds happen to accommodate paper thickness.
- Balance form and function with your folds, think about how someone will unfold and refold the piece: what do they see first, last and how does it go back together?
How to Design Your Project for Binding
- Remember to include blank pages so you have the right number of pages for your piece.
- Work with your printer when you're printing books and catalogs to get the pagination correct.
- Each binding format has a minimum and maximum number of pages and a specific multiple of pages.
- Your printer should provide you with a template that works for your binding method.
- Always ask for a proof, especially with this type of printing project.
Planning for Custom Effects
- The thinnest detail should be twice the thickness of the paper.
Die Cutting
cookie-cutter on your paper to make your text, artwork and designs get cut out of the paper. A die cut uses a metal die that looks a lot like a cookie cutter. This is shaped by hand and because of the limitations of bending metal, standard die cuts must keep at least 1/8th of inch of space between designs. Sharp points may not work well and very small text can lose quality.
Foil Stamping
Planning for Trimming, Cutting and Shaping Your Printed Piece
Your printed piece is going to be cut and trimmed. Your printing company should help you plan your printing properly, so there isn't much you need to do to prepare, but here are the industry terms so you can speak fluent printerese.
How to Plan Your Bleed
A bleed is needed when printing extends to the edge of the paper, so when the piece is trimmed or cut to the final size, the artwork goes all they way to the edge. A full bleed describes a print project that has artwork that touches every edge. When in doubt, include bleed in your document.- Create a bleed that is 0.125" on all sides.
- If you're making multi-page InDesign documents add the bleed in document settings.
How to Plan Margins or Safe Zones
A margin is the space between the print and the edge of the page, sometimes called the Safe Zone. The margin should be a minimum of 1/16 or .0625", preferably 0.125". You just want to make sure your critical artwork or text has a bit of room so it isn't in danger of being chopped off in the cutting process.Choosing Paper & Ink
You'll need to work with your printer to choose the best substrate (paper) for your project. Paper comes in a variety of weights, finishes and coatings.
Choose Paper with the Right Weight
A paper's weight is, more or less, a measure of its thickness. A higher weight will be sturdier, thicker and firmer. Higher weight papers are great for business cards, bottle-neckers, cards, tags and catalog covers. Lighter weight papers are ideal for brochures, envelopes, stationery and interior pages of catalogs. Higher weight paper is usually more expensive.
Choose the Paper Type
Papers also come coated or uncoated. Coated papers have a gloss or matte finish that resists smudges and stains and displays the ink brighter and crisper. This also makes writing on the paper difficult. It's best used for brochures, some business cards and marketing pieces that need to look higher end and aren't being used for writing.
Additional Paper Coatings
There are also specialty coatings that can be added after a piece is printed. These help protect the entire piece or are used to create eye-catching effects.Exporting Your Work for the Printer
Packaging InDesign Files for a Professional Printer
If you'd prefer to supply the actual InDesign document to your printer - make sure you package the InDesign file. Zip the entire file and provide that to your printer. Your printer will need all of your images and fonts, so you'll need to include the entire package not just the Indd file. When packaging, check the boxes shown below.
Exporting a PDF from InDesign
When exporting a PDF from InDesign:- Include all pages
- Export the document in pages not spreads
- Either choose "no compression" or choose Bicubic Downsampling on Color and Greyscale images to 300 pixels per inch for images above 450. For Monochrome images set bicubic downsampling to 1200 pixels per inch for images above 1800.
- For marks and bleeds - don't include any marks, but make sure you check "use document bleed settings" if you included the bleed in your settings. If not, you can specify the .125" bleed here.
Exporting a PDF for a Professional Printer
Exporting your press ready file for the printing company is very easy in all modern page layout and design programs. Usually you'd export everything into a PDF but sometimes you may export the entire project including images, fonts and other elements. Here are some tips to keep in mind, many that have already been mentioned:- Make sure your images are the right DPI (300 or higher) for printing.
- Use vector for text, drawings and logos when possible.
- Don't export a PDF with security settings and password protection unless your printer is prepared for and can work with that security.
- When in doubt, always choose the highest quality file possible.
- If your project file is too big for email, consider using Dropbox or Google Drive to host the file or see if your printer has a solution for handling large files.
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