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AKazak
Participant
May 26, 2022
Question

InDesign 2020 (15.0.3): import of RGB TIF makes pure black items to glow

  • May 26, 2022
  • 3 replies
  • 314 views

Greetings!

 

  How do I fix the following glow of pure black items after import of RGB TIF files?

 

 

Thank you.

 

 

This topic has been closed for replies.

3 replies

AKazak
AKazakAuthor
Participant
June 4, 2022

Additional research on the topic showed, that the glow around black lines is in place in the original RGИ images.

I assume that image producing software I used to generate the original RGB images made a kind of antialiasing or font smoothing to make text more nice to read.

 

Does this make sense?

Community Expert
May 27, 2022

Hi AKazak,

best provide a sample TIF file so that we can look into the issue more closely. Put it on Dropbox and share the download link. I think, this is really a job for PhotoShop and not for InDesign to prepare the image print-ready.

 

Regards,
Uwe Laubender
( Adobe Community Professional )

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 26, 2022

We need more informations:

  1. Is the output also RGB?
  2. What PDF export settings do you use?
  3. To be honest, I do not really understand, what you mean with glow and what you will tell us with those 2 screenshots?
  4. Why do you use TIFF and not any vector file for this graphic, like AI or PDF/X-4? Where does the image come from?
AKazak
AKazakAuthor
Participant
May 27, 2022

1) The target output is CMYK.

2) Will share the screenshot a bit later.

3) On the screenshot: left is the original RGB TIF image in the Windows Preview; right is the image imported to ID with black (K) turned off. So the pure black lines in the original TIF become black with light magenta glow, especially the text labels.

4) Vector is not an option for me since the image generating software cannot output to SVG, AI or vector PDF.

 

Thank you.

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 27, 2022

If you import RGB images of any kind and convert it uopon output to CMYK in InDesign you will always get 4c-Black.

I recommend to confert this graphic (contrary to a photo) in Photoshop to CMYK, use a personalizid conversion with maximal Black to avoid 4 black. But better would be to use an AI or PDF/X4 file. Where does the graph come from? I would avoid Photoshop with such thin lines. I am sure you have access a file where you can go the vector path instead a file with pixels.