Search results

  1. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    Without a file to look at, we can't comment :(.
  2. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    Stick it on your favorite file sharing site - DropBox, Acrobat.com, etc. and post the URL
  3. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    Thanks - but can I get the PDF that does with it? I need to see the specification of the colors in the PDF to understand the behavior and determine if it is correct or not.
  4. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    Robert - I am not follow you at all on these things. Can you post some screen shots and sample PDFs that demonstrate these problems.
  5. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    If you open that file and look at the Fonts info (File->Properties->Fonts), it clearly shows them as native OpenType. I have verified this in the PDF structure. So now we need to see (as I wrote in a separate message) the original PDF to see if they were there to begin with or some other...
  6. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    It looks like you already ran the flattener on this. I need the original...
  7. leonardr

    Acrobat Preflight 9 vs X

    Certainly bugs have been fixed and improvements made. So let's see what you've got. The new behavior (ignore) is correct. Separation All is a special thing and should never be converted. Are you seeing this for ALL PDFs or just some? can you post one that demonstrates this problem...
  8. leonardr

    Overprinting Issues - Who's fault? Any good way to prevent?

    It removes all overprinting instructions and instead creates new objects that are the "final" color.
  9. leonardr

    InDesign gradient question

    Just another great reason to move from PDF/X-1a to PDF/X-4
  10. leonardr

    Overprinting Issues - Who's fault? Any good way to prevent?

    In addition to all the excellent advice already posted, I will make one additional comment based on the old joke. Customer: It never prints right when I use overprinting. Printer: So don't use overprinting. Obviously, getting customers to do the right thing isn't going to happen :(. However...
  11. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Yes, if the original files have different values then those values will be carried through in "normal" PDF - we will NOT change it. ONLY IF you create a PDF/X file, will we consolidate the alternative values.
  12. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Following my rules in the previous post... IF you tell InDesign to convert colors as part of the export to PDF, then it will do so. IF you are creating a "normal" PDF, then we don't merge or consolidate the spots in any way. IF you are creating a PDF/X file, then we will do whatever we have...
  13. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Not really. IF you tell InDesign to color convert things, then it will color convert BOTH object colors AND their alternates. If you tell InDesign to leave things alone, that means both object colors and their alternates. IF you tell InDesign to make a PDF/X compliant file, then it will do so...
  14. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Do you mean an actual conversion of Spot->Process/CMYK? OR just a change to the ALTERNATE color associated with the spot? The former will NEVER happen in our products UNLESS you explicitly choose to do it (via the Ink Manager, Color Convert, Preflight, etc.) The latter CAN HAPPEN if you are...
  15. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    AFAIK, the spots in placed PDFs (or EPSs) are NOT remapped during "normal" PDF export - they would be left alone. So if you had CMYK-based alternates in the original and then exported, you would still have CMYK-based alternates. Also, if you have different spots of the same name, they will...
  16. leonardr

    Make Menu Windows Persistent In Acrobat X

    No, Acrobat won't reopen those (or other) windows automatically.
  17. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Both PDF and EPS/PS have a concept called an "alternate colorspace". For spot colors (technically, the Separation colorspace), an alternate is provided for when the viewer does not have the original present. The obvious example being Adobe Reader, which knows NOTHING about Pantone inks - so it...
  18. leonardr

    font message in acrobat--OS X 10.7.4, Illustrator .pdf, Suitcase Fusion 4, OTF font

    Clearly HOW you are producing the PDF is an issue, since at least one of the fonts you have in that screen shot is NOT embedded - certainly not what you want. That's to be expected, since when producing a PDF using certain methods, a CFF-based OpenType font will be "reduced" to it's original...
  19. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    People also jump off bridges - but I'm not going to help them do it :).
  20. leonardr

    CS6 PMS Values in CMYK vs CS5 PMS Values in CMYK

    Correct. Pantone provides Adobe with a library that our applications use. That library includes both Lab as well as CMYK values for each of the provided colors. As the actual inks that Pantone produces changes, and as they improve their colorimetric measurements, those Lab & CMYK values...

PressWise

A 30-day Fix for Managed Chaos

As any print professional knows, printing can be managed chaos. Software that solves multiple problems and provides measurable and monetizable value has a direct impact on the bottom-line.

“We reduced order entry costs by about 40%.” Significant savings in a shop that turns about 500 jobs a month.


Learn how…….

 
Back
Top