Skip to main content
AfricanHummingbird
Participant
October 3, 2012
Question

Which colour profile to use for hi-res print pdf and low-res web pdf in InDesign

  • October 3, 2012
  • 2 replies
  • 26619 views

Hi all,

I am creating a document in Indesign with many images and lots of colour and I want to create a low resolution pdf for the web which keeps as much of the colour as possible.

At the moment all the images are RGB. Should I change them to CMYK in Photoshop or do that when I pdf the document?

I will also be creating a high resolution pdf for print, however I do not know where it will be printed therefore I don't have any colour profile information from the printer, so I just need a good general profile to use.

Can anyone assist with information, it would be greatly appreciated.

Many thanks

Juliette

This topic has been closed for replies.

2 replies

Inspiring
October 4, 2012

for viewing on the web (and on the monitor) -- i would CONVERT the .pdf only to the sRGB ICC Profile and be sure to embed the profile

for printing -- you don't say if it's a CMYK printing press, an ink-jet printer, or if it is going through RIP -- so it would be rather meaningless for me to speculate a profile (use an RGB source profile for most inkjets; a CMYK source profile for offset press; a RIP on an inkjet can print either CMYK or RGB... know your workflow)

i generally keep the original source profile until i make the one Conversion to final destination profile for packaging

read up on Photoshop "Soft Proofing" gamut issues for out of gamut color...

Participant
October 4, 2012

Hi Juliette,

You have a two part question there so I will answer them one at a time.

Web

You will want to use a RGB profile for any web graphics as that is the standard and it supports a larger color spectrum and all monitors use a RGB profile not CMYK

Print

A good general color profile for hi resolution printing is one of the following two

Working CMYK US Coated

or

Working RGB

these profiles will be sufficient

I use - FOGRA27 and FORGA39 - for my grand format prints but this is because I am very familiar with the equipment the printer is using

For print I would suggest converting any RGB profiles over to CMYK so you arent shocked as to color shift and brightness of the final print.