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EnhanceReality
Participating Frequently
February 10, 2012
Question

Need To Learn InDesign Fast

  • February 10, 2012
  • 5 replies
  • 25246 views

I already know Photoshop, but I need to learn inDesign for a new job and FAST. I'd like to find some good fast-paced video tutorials. Lynda just annoys me (I don't need to learn how to import graphics or transform objects). Basically I'd like to watch a pro run through creating a few high quality presentations start to finish. Does anyone have an idea where I should look?

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5 replies

February 11, 2012

LMAO @ a quickie!

Seriously? If lynda.com bores you and you can't be bothered to learn a program... may I suggest... a job in a different industry?

No way would I want someone that doesnt't know what they're doing to do work for me.

Would you take your car to a shonky repairer?

Learn the program, it will be worth it, even if you must miss out on this job... Sheesh

Peter Spier
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 11, 2012

I've been staying out of this up to now, but I can't hold myself back any longer.

Do you have any experience in print production in Photoshop? Do you know the differences between spot and process colors, and RGB, CMYK, and Lab spaces? Do you understand resolution and resampling, and when it's OK and when it's not? Do you know what bleed is? Imposition? Do you understand color management?

How about working with styles and master pages? Those concepts don't exist in Photoshop.

There is a lot more to using InDesign for print than just putting text and pretty pictures on a page, and if you think you don't need to understand the printing porocess, or that you can learn it in five minutes, you should start your job search for a new position now.

EnhanceReality
Participating Frequently
February 11, 2012

Peter Spier wrote:

I've been staying out of this up to now, but I can't hold myself back any longer.

Do you have any experience in print production in Photoshop? Do you know the differences between spot and process colors, and RGB, CMYK, and Lab spaces? Do you understand resolution and resampling, and when it's OK and when it's not? Do you know what bleed is? Imposition? Do you understand color management?

How about working with styles and master pages? Those concepts don't exist in Photoshop.

There is a lot more to using InDesign for print than just putting text and pretty pictures on a page, and if you think you don't need to understand the printing porocess, or that you can learn it in five minutes, you should start your job search for a new position now.

Let's see, I'm currently a digital restoration artist so... yeah, definitely have "experience in print production in Photoshop". As for the rest of your inqueries: sure do; that's an affirmative; not sure (probably not as well as you if I do); actually, yes; that's a new one; color management is pretty much my job description; and lastly styles and master pages is not a complicated concept at all, which is exactly my point. A quick demonstration is enough to pick up most of this stuff, though perhaps not for some folks (I can only assume so by your apparent incredulousness). I do not have a degree or any kind of Adobe certification. I got my current job by a try-out process in which I beat out hundreds of applicants with college degrees. I didn't think it would be necessary to turn this into a discussion about me personally (afterall, I was only looking for resources and hoped a few of the folks here would have some ideas), but suffice it to say I'm not your average design student.

I'm not suggesting that I'm going to be an expert at it in no time, but I will be proficient with InDesign by this time next week, one way or another. No one said anything about "five minutes". Idealy, I could spend somewhere around a total 20 hours observing a few professionals working at their actual speed. And let me assure you, regardless of my InDesign experience, the new job I'm referring to is mine on the basis of my skills as they are; I'd simply like to enhance my value to the company (as I thought any employee would want to), and they had mentioned InDesign. To you and "lilia@", don't let your insecurity get the best of you, you're still cool InDesign geeks and no upstart is just going to jump in and be as cool as you with all your InDesign know-how. If your whole purpose in commenting is to make feeble attempts at condecending to some stranger, might I suggest you visit YouTube. Plenty of like-minded trolls for you to enjoy correspondence with there.

I appreciate any and all CONSTRUCTIVE criticism, though for those for whom this post makes you "LMAO", I suppose I'm glad I could make your day more entertaining.

Peter Spier
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 11, 2012

I'm not trying to be a troll here. We don't know anything about you or your background, other than you say you are impatient. I've met lots of users, even experienced ones, whose opinions of their skills were vastly overblown.

I'm a learn by observation sort of person, myself, and I don't like video training either. I learned the jewelry trade as a younger person by sitting next to guys with years of trade experience, and I learned finish carpentry by working with a pro for six months, and I made a living in both of those trades (and was well respected for my skills) before taking up graphics. I thought I knew a lot about DTP after a few courses and talked may way into a job at a local printer (apparently nobody else applied). I found out very quickly what I didn't know. I would say it took me two years of on-the-job training -- figuring out and fixing other people's mistakes so I could make their files print -- to get to the point where I could make a file that could be handed off to a printer and it wouldn't need some sort of corrective action.

I don't doubt your photoshop skills. I don't know waht you mean by "resoration artist," but if it means salvaging old photos, enhancing images, and the like, that's great, but it isn't print production, it's image restoration. That's a valuable skill, but it won't make your InDesign files print as you expect them too. It's also not color management, which is involved in matching color across different output media and devices. Perhaps you have those skills, too.

You sound like a bright person, and a "quick demonstration" may really be enough for you. I hope so, but don't deceive yourself too much. InDesign is actually quite a bit more complex than Photoshop, and working for print is more complex than the appearance on your screen.

Good luck.

winterm
Legend
February 11, 2012

well, I think, there is at least one thing, common for PS and ID - both are endless in their possibilities and combinations. Just like chess. You can go different ways everyday, pursuing the same goals... And there's almost nothing you do, that cannot be done yet a bit smarter.

February 10, 2012

It wouldn't have been quite as cool in the Matrix movie if Neo had said, after they unplugged him from his plug-in training session, "I know InDesign."

Stix_Hart
Inspiring
February 10, 2012

EnhanceReality wrote:

I don't need to learn how to import graphics or transform objects)

Sorry to burst your bubble but you do need to know how to do those things sooner or later to create a presentation, although I can appreciate that Lynda would go into far too much detail for what you're wanting.  IMHO you're going to have to be prepared to put in a day or so at least depending on your computer savvy before you'll be much use with it, I reckon Adobe's classroom in a book series might suit you better, you can go through them as fast as you can take it in.

How about getting a template to start off with, try www.stockindesign.com for a great range of free ones or stockoayouts.com have a bigger range but you have to pay.

EnhanceReality
Participating Frequently
February 10, 2012

Thanks for the links. I'm not sure I understand the reasoning behind your quote. What I meant by "I don't need to learn how to.." is that its something I certainly already know, and perhaps I should have been more specific than the vague statement that "I already know Photoshop". I've been a professional restoration artist for a few years and I do a lot of design recreationally with PS CS5. I'm a young guy and I'd pit my learning curve against just about anyone, and I just want to see how its done, fast and efficiently. I don't have time for lynda and so many of the other very basic tutorials I've been able to find. Thanks for the tips.

Joel Cherney
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 10, 2012

I'm with you on hating Lynda, but I generally hate tutorial videos in general unless I'm a complete noob. I wish they were all subtitled so I could watch 'em at 3x speed.

That being said, you'll find that InDesign has a very different toolset and a lot of your Photoshop knowledge will not be portable. In fact, it'll be to your detriment at first. In fact, you don't "import" graphics into ID at all, you place files, and the content remains outside of InDesign, and you need to maintain the relationship in the file heirarchy between the INDD and the graphics file which you placed into it. (But doing so is optional with placed text content.) Did you already know this? Because I know very little about PS, but I do know that its import-graphics functionality doesn't operate the same way as does InDesign. At all. Similarly, although layers do exist in InDesign, but they don't work the same way as they do in PS, and you use them for very different purposes.

Honestly, probably your best bet is to a) spend some time looking at the posts here, and on places like indesignsecrets.com, and b) trying stuff in a DIY fashion and asking about it here. Stix' suggestion to grab some stock files and pull 'em apart is a good one.

Also: InDesign has mostly been a print design app for most of its existence, and the presentation-related tools are kind of new, and therefore you won't find as much about them online as you will about specifically print-related stuff. It'd be nice to know exactly what you meant: are you going to be making training presentations that get packaged as PDFs?  Are you planning on exporting .swf?