Skip to main content
keithconover
Inspiring
January 20, 2019
Question

Change Default Paragraph Shading Color FOR AN EXISTING DOCUMENT

  • January 20, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 3741 views

I am doing a lot of revision work that requires me to shade changed paragraphs in yellow. I use the Essentials Classic workspace as it meets my needs most of the time and I'm used to it.

It used to be that in InDesign you could start up InDesign and change something in the Control Bar (or what MS calls the Ribbon) with no document open and that would set the default.

Well, I start with no documents open, and of course I now see the Start workspace which doesn't have the control bar. So, without a document open, I go up to the top of the screen on the right, and switch to Essentials Classic and change from dark blue (who wants to highlight a paragraph that's usually in black text with dark blue, anyway?) to yellow. And now whenever I open a new document, the default paragraph shading is yellow. Great!

But how do I change the default for existing documents? Without copying every existing document into a new document? Every time I open a new document it keeps defaulting to that @17502962$@#$% blue again!

Appreciate any help. Probably something very obvious.

This topic has been closed for replies.

3 replies

Participant
April 25, 2019

Alert people as much as you can I have the secret you wanna see

zachpowless427
jane-e
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 20, 2019

Hi Keith,

The reason I don't like either Essentials or Essentials Classic is that it does not have paragraph, character, and object style. That's why I use the Advanced Workspace.

  • Here I started a new document so it only has [Basic. Paragraph] with no overrides.
  • As soon as I enable Shading [Basic Paragraph] shows an override. Note that I also made the color yellow.
  • For me, I don't use Basic Paragraph and I don't base other styles on it. Not ever. So the answer for you depends on what styles you are using. For me Bullets, indents, etc., are all based on Body Text, so I can modify Body text and it will ripple through.

What kind of styles do you have in your document if any?

keithconover
Inspiring
January 20, 2019

I guess I have customized Essentials Classic to be the way I like it, don't remember doing this but must have. Long ago, maybe as far back as switching from Xerox Ventura Publisher, I decided what I want in what order, and whenever Adobe trashes my customized panel, I quickly recreate it and move on. I guess the last time I just customized Essentials Classic and then kept on going without thinking about it much. I do occasionally change what I keep on the right side there, but below is what's there currently.  I guess we could go on and argue about which things should be on here, which I'm sure is different for everyone, but would be an enlightening discussion. Or, which order they should be in, which actually might be the same for most people, given we're talking usability, specifically discoverability, learnability and memorability; sorry, I'm a UX geek. P.S. I do like using [Basic Paragraph] so that I can make very global changes to a document quickly. P.P.S. I have lots of styles, see far below.

For a large family of documents I work on and update regularly (textbooks and governing documents for the Appalachian Search and Rescue Conference, see some of them at http://asrc.net) and below shows most of the styles. I use a Book Panel to keep the styles synchronized between the documents. My collection of styles gets dirty when I have to add something for a particularly problem, but then every now and then I go in there with a broom and clean things up, consolidating some styles.

keithconover
Inspiring
January 20, 2019

but after several upgrades and trying to trace down where the customized ones resided and got left behind during the upgrades

When you upgrade there is an option to migrate your preferences. If you don't want to migrate the saved workspaces live in the InDesign preferences folder.

On OSX it is here: Users/username/Library/Preferences/Adobe InDesign/Version #/en_US/Workspaces

On Windows it should be: Users/<USER>/AppData/Roaming/Adobe/InDesign/<Version #>/<Language>/Workspaces

I typed several paragraphs of text into it and made sure they were all [No Paragraph Style].

How did you do that?  [Basic Paragraph Style] is based on [No Paragraph Style], but there's no option to choose [No Paragraph Style] in the Paragraph Styles panel.

So here I've altered my [Basic Paragraph Style] (no + sign), and the Options dialog lists the changes I made :

The [No Paragraph Style] style is not editable, and to use it with no alterations, I would have to make a copy of the [Basic Paragraph] style and reset it to the [No Paragraph Style] base—MinionPro Regular, 12pt, auto leading, etc.

I then carefully deselected the one text frame, and in the Paragraph Panel, changed it from blue to yellow.

Because you are using the Paragraph panel, and not the Paragraph Styles panel, you are setting the document's future text frame default, which may or may not include a (overridden) paragraph, character, or object style.


As to how I typed text in [No Paragraph Style] it's simple. New document with no styles at all, create a rectangle frame and start typing into it.

Bill Silbert
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 20, 2019

Try this. Upon opening an existing document with no text frames selected open the Paragraph Panel, activate the shading option and change the color to what you want. Then uncheck the option and do a save of the document. Then when you select text that you want shaded and reactivate the shading option it should still have the color that you set. It worked for me with CC 2019 on an iMac.

keithconover
Inspiring
January 20, 2019

Thanks for the reply! I am using InDesign 2019 14.0.1 x64 Windows. I find that if I do as you say:

Open an existing document with no text frames selected

Done.

Open the Paragraph Panel

Done.

Activate the shading option and change the color to what you want.

Done, changed to yellow.

Then uncheck the option and do a save of the document.

Done.

Reopened, and as long as a text frame is not selected, the default of yellow is in there.

But as soon as I select any text, it changes back to blue.

I also tried changing the default and exiting InDesign entirely and reopening the document and still doesn't work.

I suspect this may be a bug in the Windows version that isn't there in the Mac version.

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 20, 2019

I am using InDesign 2019 14.0.1 x64 Windows.

BTW, in the recent versions, the Paragraph Shading for [No Paragraph Style] is set to [Black] and Off. There was a problem in earlier versions with it being set to the default cyan swatch.