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#1 (permalink) |
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Not Spanish
Join Date: May 2007
Location: De'mshire
Posts: 51
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PDF optimal compression settings
Hi everyone, I know it's a bit cheeky only having just joined and everything, but was needing a hand with optimising my PDF compression for sending adverts to mag publishers. for newsprint my settings seem to be fine (as colour run tends to hide artifacts well), but when it comes to glossies sometimes they look a bit jaggy. We try to keep the filesize down because we email copy, but if any of you could put me right I would be most grateful! Current settings are: Adobe 5.0 (PDF 1.4) Compatibility Res: 600 DPI and my images are downscaled to 300 if over 450ppi (both colour and G/S) with the image quality as jpeg medium. Are there any better settings? Oh, and hello everyone by the way! |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Doodler.
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Manchester, UK
Posts: 1,333
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Don't drop the image quality setting at all. The file size will remain pretty low (a few megs should be ok for email?) but changing it below high/maximum will make a nasty mess. And hi |
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#3 (permalink) |
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389 ppm and rising
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Järvenpää, Finland
Posts: 4,147
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High quality jpeg settings and 300 dpi should be fine. No reason for any jaggies to appear. I've noticed that creating PDFs in Distiller results in very much smaller file sizes than producing them directly from PS. I've run into publishers who demand that the Distiller program is used! My free fonts www.utfi.net
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#5 (permalink) |
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bloody peasant
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Tallinn, Estonia
Posts: 2,649
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You can get some ugly mess on the final printouts if you use exporting PDF-s directly from PS, ID or AI. If you want to be absolutely sure that you dont cock anything up use Distiller, my local printers usually say that printing from a PDF that was created in ID or something else without distilling it is on your own expence if anything fucks up. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Banned™
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 3,138
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there is always font problems when you export straight out of distiller... and when you export to pdf when there is a pdf ADVERT already in the ps then it really screws things up!! I would always run a ps through distiller!!! |
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#7 (permalink) |
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+
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Tropical Networks
Posts: 1,321
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In Acrobat, there is a strange function : File > Reduce File Size Don't know what it does, as it changes nothing but the file size... Fonts are like cologne: A bad choice speaks louder than a good one. Justin Feinstein
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#8 (permalink) |
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389 ppm and rising
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Järvenpää, Finland
Posts: 4,147
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It compacts an old PDF file using the latest Adobe compression algorithm. The can easily shrink by 75%! The first time I used the new Distiller version, I was certain that I had done something wrong because instead of getting the 90k PDF I expected, it was only 24k. Took me half an hour to convince myself there was nothing wrong! My free fonts www.utfi.net
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#9 (permalink) | |
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+
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Tropical Networks
Posts: 1,321
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Quote:
ha ha ha ! still I'm not convinced... ;-) Fonts are like cologne: A bad choice speaks louder than a good one. Justin Feinstein
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#11 (permalink) |
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Not Spanish
Join Date: May 2007
Location: De'mshire
Posts: 51
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Just as a return to this, I've come across this gem- thought it might be helpful / throw up a couple of issues- wubwubwub.pass4press.com. I personally think it's a good thing to have a benchmark approval system for copy submission, although it does seem more than slightly cheeky that you have to use the expensive products to do it. Only got PS? Buy Distiller/InDesign. Ouch, not good for the recently graduated/shoestring designers. Thoughts / opinions? |
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#12 (permalink) |
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389 ppm and rising
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Järvenpää, Finland
Posts: 4,147
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You're absolutely right. Pisses me off too that I send a pdf to a printer who then bitches at me because he wants a small pdf. Adobe should damn well incorporate Distiller technology into PS and ID too. The apps cost enough as it is and they don't have to pay anyone to lease the technology. Actually, the entire "produce PDFs via another application" is both inconvenient and outdated. My free fonts www.utfi.net
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#13 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 26
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I have always just used print>>Adobe PDF straight from photoshop. ('Adobe PDF' appears as one of the printers) As long as the pdf setting is at X/1a I never have a problem. I always thought this went through distiller because if you look in the processes (task manager) suddenly the process eating up all the memory is one called "AcroDist" My printer, who is generally fussy about PDF specs told me that as long as its to x-1a standard, there'll never be a problem. If I'm designing an A4 advert, I set the paper size to A3, which leaves loads of room for the bleeds and crop marks etc. An average full page colour advert usually ends up at about 2 or 3 mb, which is fine for email. (Though oddly if you design the same advert using Quark Xpress the PDF ends up smaller. Weird. Must be the layers etc) |
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#14 (permalink) | |
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Banned™
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 3,138
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Quote:
How much CRAP written in one message!!! No one listen to this person please... |
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#16 (permalink) | |
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On yer bike...
Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,957
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Quote:
Use that all the time for client proofs - but never do it for a printer - just too nervous about the loss of info - I think it use JPEG compression on the images too... Tend to drop EPS files into distiller set to 'press quality' - usually gets the job done just right. For larger projects I still tend to hand them the collected Quark files |
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