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Inspiring
July 30, 2017
Answered

Photos with white backgrounds

  • July 30, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 1681 views

This might be more of a Photoshop question than an InDesign question. However, I want to ask here it, because I think I will get a reply from someone with more experience of print production.

I am preparing a document for CMYK. It has a number of photos with white backgrounds, placed as JPEGs. I want to ensure that the white of the photo = paper white. Is proper color management alone sufficient to make this happen? Or is it necessary to replace the white background of the photo with transparency in Photoshop?

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    Correct answer MW Design

    Paper color in ID does not equate to transparency in an image.

    If these images have a truly white background and are not on the top of anything that uses color, you are good to go. (White, except with special printing conditions and an actual white ink, does not print.)

    If these images are sitting on anything that uses color other than white, then you would need to remove the white from any such image in PS and then import the PSD file to retain that transparency.

    Mike

    2 replies

    Stephen Marsh
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 30, 2017

    It of course depends on the catalogue and image, however for many catalogue “product shot” images that “have a white background” it can be better to have a minimum highlight dot of say 3-5% for any large white areas in the image, leaving 0% for “specular” whites, chrome reflections, light sources etc. This provides a natural “border” around the catalogue image, which is helpful if the layout has a grid type layout. The image does not “disappear” off into the page. However if there are frames/borders around the images, then they are obviously “self contained”.

    MW Design
    MW DesignCorrect answer
    Inspiring
    July 30, 2017

    Paper color in ID does not equate to transparency in an image.

    If these images have a truly white background and are not on the top of anything that uses color, you are good to go. (White, except with special printing conditions and an actual white ink, does not print.)

    If these images are sitting on anything that uses color other than white, then you would need to remove the white from any such image in PS and then import the PSD file to retain that transparency.

    Mike

    Bill Silbert
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 30, 2017

    I agree with everything that Mike said above. I would just like to add that areas of solid color in Photoshop may look consistent to the eye but  different sections of those areas often will read with different CMYK breakdowns when sampled with the eyedropper. So I would say that to be really sure that your areas that are white appear so in the final printing I would make them transparent and save the files as .PSDs before importing them into InDesign.

    Inspiring
    July 30, 2017

    Thanks. This is a catalog and there are hundreds of them, so I really want to use JPEGS to keep the size of the ID file to a manageable level.