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Participant
July 19, 2017
Question

Indesign cc [publishing leaflet online very slow since adding images]

  • July 19, 2017
  • 3 replies
  • 827 views

I have created a tri-folding leaflet and when publishing online ,the loading is extremely slow.

My images are jpegs and I have inputted content from photoshop as jpegs. The publishing of the leaflet has slowed down since I inputted the images.

Would you recommend saving the images in a different format? or even compressing the document?

I would appreciate any suggestions.

    This topic has been closed for replies.

    3 replies

    Diane Burns
    Inspiring
    July 27, 2017

    I've never heard of any problem outlining type.

    Is there any transparency on that type?

    I did a simple text, and found no difference with the outlined type on top of a jpeg image. But I only tested one.

    Diane Burns
    Inspiring
    July 19, 2017

    I have found that I have problems if I change to HiDPI resolution when publishing. Under the "Advanced" pane of the Publish Online dialog, make sure you're Image Settings Resolution is at Standard 96 ppi, not HiDPI 144 ppi.

    Participant
    July 27, 2017

    Thank you for your suggestions, I have checked all of these settings and the document was following the specifications you have both pointed out.

    I realised today that the issue isn't the images and instead the issue sparks from having an outline around the text. As soon as I insert an outline around the text (as shown below with the orange), the document slows down and is unable to export to be published online.

    Do you have any idea why this might be?

    Mike Witherell
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 27, 2017

    Why not put type like that into the jpg images directly, instead of over the images from within InDesign?

    Mike Witherell
    Bill Silbert
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 19, 2017

    What resolution are the jpegs and what size are they in the InDesign document? If they are in at 100% size and either 72 or 96 ppi then you should not be having a problem for publishing online. Depending on how many images you are using even the upper limit of 144 dpi would not usually be a problem.