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Bitmap images print pixelated

Community Beginner ,
Aug 03, 2024 Aug 03, 2024

I am creating a booklet using InDesign made up of images from Photoshop.  All images have been converted to 600dpi BMP files.  These print nicely in Photoshop, but come out slightly pixelated when printing either directly from InDesign or when exported to a PDF.

Example from Photoshop:

IMG_8762.JPG
Example from InDesign:

IMG_8761.JPG

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Import and export , Print
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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I have also either downscaled to 600dpi before printing (using bicubic sharper) or scanned at 600dpi and used that.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I still don't understand why the images print fine from Photoshop but not InDesign (plus, the PDF from InDesign is also pixelated). I don't think it's been addressed here yet (unless I've missed it).

 

Next questions (just to understand if the pixelation issue is related to InDesign or something else):

 

-Did you try to export to PDF from Photoshop using the same settings you're using in InDesign (I don't think you ever mentioned it). If so, will such a PDF be any different than the one exported from InDesign?

 

-As a test, try to place the same image in Illustrator, then print and export to PDF using the same settings. What will the results be?

 

I also don't think you ever confirmed that you're using the Send Data > All option when printing from InDesign:

 

leor_0-1722796657106.png

 

 

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LEGEND ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024
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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I touched on in in my arm-waving: Photoshop integrally does all the detail work I am noting, InDesign does not. ID assumes if you want Black + White, by gosh, you'll get Black plus White. Photoshop is older and wiser.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I did save as a PDF from PS and got the same result.  I am also getting pixelation when I print from Illustrator.  And Send Data: All is selected.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I can understand converting to grayscale, but why bother to convert to bitmap?

Mike Witherell
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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

Grayscale will be screened at the printing screen, e.g. 150 LPI. Bitmap mode/line art is not.

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

"Yeahbut," as an annoying colleague of mine is prone to say, and if I can kick this dead horse one more time — you're again comparing technicalities that may not reflect real world results.

 

An optimized and fairly high res grayscale image, processed for print through optmized screening, even 150lpi, is likely to produce a more acceptable result to most eyes from most 600dpi and down devices. That the dots are technically coarser is irrelevant.

 

A very high res B+W image, passed through export without change, is subject to the whims and quality of the printing device, and at 600dpi it's likely to still have some jaggies, and thus look inferior to the above approach.

 

All based on experience that I've never had good results from black line art on anything less than 1200dpi and up output devices; applying the "smoothing" at earlier stages, no matter how numerically inferior, gave a better result.

 

Somebody get this horse outta here. 🙂

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I think if there was one fundamental wrong turn in all this, it was converting/saving as bitmap/BMP with the idea that an absolute B/W file and smaller size were desirable.

 

A color model with more depth would preserve the slight shading I am pointing out is all but inevitable, and in grayscale, would not be a very large file.

 

I'd pretty much say bitmap, indexed color, BMP etc. should never be used in InDesign, even for small, simple icons and the like. Cetainly not for larger illustrrations or for print.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I'm curious what the ideal prep in PS for printing line-art would be?  Apart from converting to bitmap mode or saving as a BMP file, I am using levels to adjust contrast and threshold.  Would either of those steps be wrong, or is there some step I might be missing?

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

Okay,  chiming in here.

1. nothing wrong with BMP format, as long as you are saving this as a 1-bit BMP. That being said, yes, it's an old format so I would rather see 1-bit TIFFs in this case. Plus, you can save 1-bit TIFFs with LZW to save oodles of drive space.

2. If you are printing from InDesign directly, there are a few places, that by default, InDesign sets a "compromise".

Under Graphics, ID defaults to Optimized Subsampling. Use "All" instead; this sends the complete image data no matter how large it is. When optimized is set, ID will send a reduced resolution version based on the final resolution of your printer.

For non-PS printers, under Advanced, ID defaults to Print as Bitmap > 300 dpi, so again, it's downsampling, even though your Brother has a native 600. For Color/Greyscale images this isn't a probem, but for line art, will increase edge jagginess that the naked eye can pick up.

3. As for printing from your PDF, your Export setting shouldn't be affecting anything; you have properly turned off downsampling on monochrome images. To check, If you zoom in on the image in your PDF, does the image show the degradation there? If not, your issue is downstream (i.e. printer/printer settings).

4. If your line art images are interacting with any transparency opbjects in ID, you need to check your Transpareny Flattening settings and chnage them accordingly.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I feel like I've checked all of these boxes, and I'm still having the same issue.

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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

The pdf does not look smooth when zoomed in.  I adjusted the Transparency Flattening setting to be High Resolution.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I have the feeling that any reasonable goal has been lost in all this search for a perfect solution. So I gotta ask: are you going to provide a magnifying glass to each reader of this document? 🙂

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

I received the file from Jason @Jason28603059yx35 

It was a 1200 ppi RGB TIFF. He also sent one he process and downsampled to 600 ppi, but I used the original scan.

(I don't know if it was scanned at 1200 or upres'd to 1200, but it was 1200 ppi.)

 

First, the original art was hand-drawn so the lines were "shaky" to begin with. Original from Photoshop screen capture:

image.png

I processed the file three ways after increasing the contrast with levels a bit. 

  • RGB with LZW compression. (LZW is lossless)
  • Grayscale with LZW compression.
  • Bitmap Mode with LZW compression.

I placed them in InDesign and printed them, sending All data. (I had to take a close-up photo with my phone since my scanner did not allow that much scaling, so you are seeing the paper texture.) The color and grayscale were identical under a loop and both looked soft a actual size compared to the line art version. As I mentioned, they would be screened at the printers linescreen, and it shows on the image. (My printer is also a 600 dpi so I believe it prints at 170 lpi.)

image.png

Line art (Bitmap mode from Photoshop using 50% dither) printed from InDesign:

You can see that there is no screening and a definite improvement vs the color/gs.

image.png

 

I stand by my original settings on scanning/printing line art.

 

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

BTW, not that file size should be a deciding factor over quality, but the sizes were as follows:

  • Original RGB, 66.9 MBs
  • LZW RGB, 22.1 MBs
  • LZW GS, 9.4 MBs
  • LZW BM mode, 0.19 MB

Again, LZW is lossless. Although it can take a little longer to print since it has to decompress at that time, but I don't think this has been a major issue for 30+ years.

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

Based on that, do you think there is an issue with my InDesign settings?  Similar to you, I did achieve a better result with a TIFF in bitmap mode saved with LZW compression, but it still was visibly pixelated compared with when I printed directly from Photoshop.

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Community Expert ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024

Be sure to change your Graphics setting during printing to Send Data: All. See if that helps. 

 

If not, try printing on someone else's printer. See if it's just your printer.

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Beginner ,
Aug 04, 2024 Aug 04, 2024
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I think I'll try someone else's printer.

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