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kellyjaye1
Known Participant
February 20, 2013
Answered

Can document size be extended past 216 inches?

  • February 20, 2013
  • 5 replies
  • 48398 views

We just started getting more into banner and sign printing.  I have since learned that InDesign has a max size limit of 216 inches.  I prefer Indesign over Illustrator but I tried with that also and that gives me a limit of 227 inches.  I need to go bigger than this and it will probably be a regular problem.  Is there a way to trick ID or AI to go larger?

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer BobLevine

Scale it down. If you need 800 inches set the document up as 200 and

make sure any graphics have 4x the resolution.

Bob

5 replies

Martin Dedron
Inspiring
June 1, 2023

What about high quality prints on a whole roll of plotter printer?

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 1, 2023

Hi @Martin Dedron , The original post is 10 years old, so you might want to start a new thread, but nothing has changed—InDesign has a 216" limit and PDF has a 200" limit.

 

Bob’s answer is still correct—if you need to output an 800" print, the setup would be a 200" ID doc with the effective Resolution of the placed images’ Effective Resolutions at 4x the desired output resolution, and the Print>Setup>Scale options set to 400%. If you want an output resolution of 200ppi the image Effective Resolution needs to be 800ppi—see Link Info with the image selected.

Martin Dedron
Inspiring
June 6, 2023

In the end it was just easier to split the document for me.

However, regarding the computer capacities nowadays, I wonder about the point of keeping those limits instead of permitting a 1:1 scaling.

 

Another thing to consider is the printer's capacities (for a Canon 4100s Pro, about three meters, so definitly not the whole paper roll...), and to adjust from that.

Participant
September 7, 2022

if one dimension is still okay, you can set your pages up as a spread.

Inspiring
September 29, 2021

ppl at adobe must be joking. just remove those restrictions. it is in their hands to adjust that lousy variable in code... ridiculous 

Community Expert
September 29, 2021

The reason is quite simple. 

Computer resources. The larger the file and the images the larger the file and larger the resources the computer needs.

 

Working at 10% size has worked since the 1990s or even before that. That's over 30 years ago of industry standard practice.

Why fix it if it's not broken?

 

If you're working at 10% of the size - and your image is 3000 ppi - then you will have 300 ppi in output - which is still way too large for a banner of large sizes. 

 

You could work at 10% of the size with an image at 300ppi giving output of 30ppi - which would would be absolutely fine for banners.

 

However, you should always check with your print provider, and confirm specs/sizes and resoltuion requirements before beginning.

 

 

Participant
February 9, 2024

It worked for QuarkXPress to require exact dimensions at exact resolution in the proper color mode. However, InDesign doesn't require any of that anymore. Industry standard practice changed. It's freed up effort for more creative endeavors. Similarly, why not make adjustments to the software to allow for larger document sizes? 

BobLevine
Community Expert
BobLevineCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
February 20, 2013

Scale it down. If you need 800 inches set the document up as 200 and

make sure any graphics have 4x the resolution.

Bob

kellyjaye1
Known Participant
February 20, 2013

That makes sense, dont know why I didnt think of that myself.  I personally hate scaling stuff, I prefer making everything the size it has to be so I dont have to worry about math and ratios :-P.  This should be ok to get by with though when this problem comes up

MW Design
Inspiring
February 20, 2013

If not wanting to use Scale except for the largest of large, use CorelDraw with its limitations of 150 feet by 150 feet.

Having used CD for such work since the early 1990s--I still use scale. Depending upon the average viewing distance, any bitmaps or bitmap effects may not need to be some arbitrary 300 dpi. Might be more, might be less.

If anyone wants a spreadsheet I wrote that uses a common formula for scaling the page and images/bitmap effects for large format printing, I can upload it.

Take care, Mike

Inspiring
February 20, 2013

Having done artwork for many banners over the years, the usual way of working is to do them at 25% or 50% of the actual size, not 100%. Sign and banner printers here in the UK are well used to receiving artwork at a quarter or half size. Try to keep to 25% or 50%, or even 10%. It's easier to do the calculations then when printing them.