Does Quark actually have 1-up on InDesign?

Gregg

Well-known member
I know this topic has been discussed before, and I was hopeful CS6 might have included the ability to export separations to PDF. Quark 8 does it nicely, why can't InDesign?

The reason I need it:
When handling book reprints, I need to supply the printer TextPlate PDFs only - not composite.

With InDesign titles: Current workflow is to print .PS of TextPlate sep, Distill to PDF.

With Quark titles (backlist): Export TextPlate sep directly to PDF.

Clearly, the Quark titles take less time.

What gives?!?!
 
Most people have moved on to composite PDF workflows, away from pre-separated .ps/.pdf files. However as you rightly mention, there are still requirements for separated files.

This does not directly answer the question, however it started me thinking on a tangent. Acrobat Pro has a preflight that can break up a PDF into layers (text, vectors, rasters etc). One can then hide all layers except the text layer. Then there is a second preflight that can remove hidden layers and flatten the remaining layers. The final PDF is still composite, not separated and it only contains text, not black vectors or black image plate elements etc...so this is probably not practical.

Stephen Marsh
 
Most people have moved on to composite PDF workflows, away from pre-separated .ps/.pdf files. However as you rightly mention, there are still requirements for separated files.

This does not directly answer the question, however it started me thinking on a tangent. Acrobat Pro has a preflight that can break up a PDF into layers (text, vectors, rasters etc). One can then hide all layers except the text layer. Then there is a second preflight that can remove hidden layers and flatten the remaining layers. The final PDF is still composite, not separated and it only contains text, not black vectors or black image plate elements etc...so this is probably not practical.

Stephen Marsh

Which version of Acrobat, and which preflight? How do you hide some of the layers after the preflight using only Acrobat?

Al
 
Which version of Acrobat, and which preflight? How do you hide some of the layers after the preflight using only Acrobat?

Al

Hi Al, that was with Acrobat Pro 9, using a single fixup found under the layers category "create different layers for vector, text, image". Another similar fixup is "put text objects on text layer".

One then hides the vector and image layers using the layers palette/panel (turn off the eye visibility icon).

Then one runs the single fixup under layers for "discard hidden layer content and flatten visible layers".

All of this would be faster than printing to separations and distilling, however I don't think that it would be the best option for Gregg's original post.


Stephen Marsh
 
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As far as I know, InDesign cannot directly export a pre-separated PDF. There might be a 3rd party plugin out there somewhere that might make this possible. If you have a full version of Acrobat, you could PRINT your InDesign file to the AdobePDF printer that comes with Acrobat and set your InDeisgn print settings to separate the colors.

Just a thought,
hp :)
 
Thanks for the feedback. I understand there are workarounds to my issue, I'm more curious to why InDesign has never had this functionality. Again, just surprised Quark has a feature that I prefer over InDesign (granted, it's the only one).
 
Thanks for the feedback. I understand there are workarounds to my issue, I'm more curious to why InDesign has never had this functionality. Again, just surprised Quark has a feature that I prefer over InDesign (granted, it's the only one).

Quark has had it from legacy workflow days. I'm trying to remember - has InDesign ever had it? If not, maybe they saw the writing on the wall regarding separated workflow. As it is, InDesign was really the first to push PDF as an output format (when compared to Quark). For PDF, you didn't need composite (as Stephen mentioned).

Greg
 
Thanks for the feedback. I understand there are workarounds to my issue, I'm more curious to why InDesign has never had this functionality. Again, just surprised Quark has a feature that I prefer over InDesign (granted, it's the only one).

Most printers would have prepress Workflow software. For example, Kodak Prinergy probably has market share in most commercial offset printers and in Prinergy it is very easy to only output the K plate from a composite colour input file (either to a new PDF or direct to a CTP). Pre-separated is mostly legacy and outdated by advances in modern and or high end software. InDesign has the ability to export composite files, which are the generally preferred format for most users and workflows. InDesign still has the ability to create separated output if it is desired, however as this is a deprecated feature for PDF files it is my guess that there has never been a great incentive for Adobe to do this via export.

Some "modern" software or workflows are still geared toward separated input and PostScript - however the current trend is to use composite PDF and APPE RIPs over PostScript and CPSI RIPs. I used to like the "security" of pre-separated files for unknown downstream providers, as I have had bad experiences with some supplier's systems and composite files. We used an embellishing company to produce foil debossing blocks and printing - they wanted a pre-separated file that only contained the foil stamp elements.

Gregg, for the book reprint, why can't you just supply a composite 4C PDF with the understanding that the printer will only be using the K separation?


Stephen Marsh
 
I digress

I digress

Thanks for the feedback. I understand there are workarounds to my issue, I'm more curious to why InDesign has never had this functionality. Again, just surprised Quark has a feature that I prefer over InDesign (granted, it's the only one).

I use both and there are at least a dozen!!! Especially if you do a lot of typesetting!
 
Can you digress a little further and at least mention a few of them?

Al
1. Hanging indents in Quark beautiful .
2. Master pages are easier to use.*
3. Page sections*and automatic page numbers easier
4. Style sheets much easier.
5. Quark imports word files easily
6. Picture placement in Quark is easier, especially with Quark 9.
7. Linking and unlinking text is now easier in Quark 9
I like Indesign but I almost always choose Quark for a new job.
 
Gregg, for the book reprint, why can't you just supply a composite 4C PDF with the understanding that the printer will only be using the K separation?


Stephen Marsh

I could, but to supply an email friendly TextPlate PDF, versus FTPing a non email friendly composite PDF, is so much easier. Also, it's not the K sep, granted the print vendor may map our spot plate "TextPlate", which is 100k, to Process Black, but for co-edition purposes we need our text to be separate from the image black.
 
I could, but to supply an email friendly TextPlate PDF, versus FTPing a non email friendly composite PDF, is so much easier. Also, it's not the K sep, granted the print vendor may map our spot plate "TextPlate", which is 100k, to Process Black, but for co-edition purposes we need our text to be separate from the image black.

Thanks Gregg, that all makes sense. So it sounds like my original method of using Acrobat to split into layers and delete the unwanted layers would work fine in this case to make a "faux K text separation" - presuming that all text elements were 100K with no CMY. Without testing, I would think that this approach would be faster than printing to .ps and distilling.

Stephen Marsh
 
Take a look at the attached. I printed to Adobe pdf out of InDesign and turned on separations. The page was 5 color with some text in PANTONE Black C. It gave me a separated pdf. Is this what you're looking for?
 

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Take a look at the attached. I printed to Adobe pdf out of InDesign and turned on separations. The page was 5 color with some text in PANTONE Black C. It gave me a separated pdf. Is this what you're looking for?

oxburger, you may have missed the OP, can you figure out a way to do the same with export to PDF from InDesign?


Stephen Marsh
 
can't you just designate the type as a spot color (5th color) and export that as a pdf?

I did not see Oxburgers post.
 
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