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Participant
April 2, 2019
Question

Do I need to resize images before importing them in Adobe InDesign?

  • April 2, 2019
  • 5 replies
  • 3594 views

Hi

I will create three different InDesign-templates for print, in different sizes, with the same image placed. The resolution should be 300 dpi and printed on uncoated paper.

My question is if I need to resize and customize the image in photoshop (tiff format), or if I just can place the PSD-file and let Indesign do the resizing in the export to PDF? What is the best solution to get the best quality?

Of course, I prefer to use a PSD and only work with one file, and then just update the link when making changes, instead of always saving new tiffs.

But do I destroy the images by letting Indesign do the job?

This topic has been closed for replies.

5 replies

JonathanArias
Legend
April 3, 2019

I just place my .psd in the layout and let indesign handle compression

Mike Witherell
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

A current trend of thinking reasons that you should use the least-altered highest-pixel-count original image file (I prefer PSD, too) and place it in the InDesign document and scale it. That way, when you get to final steps of Export to PDF, the PDF-maker gets to pull from an original quality image to make its internal image in the PDF.

That is different from an older-school thinking that had us make the PSD the correct size and pixel count (300 ppi) prior to placing into InDesign.

The idea above is to provide the PDF rip the originalest, least-altered-est image to make the PDF from. I think that for a lot of bread-and-butter printing, either viewpoint can make a quality outcome.

Mike Witherell
c.pfaffenbichler
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

The idea above is to provide the PDF rip the originalest, least-altered-est image to make the PDF from. I think that for a lot of bread-and-butter printing, either viewpoint can make a quality outcome.

I personally do not always scale the images I place in Indesign to output size in Photoshop, far from it.

As fas as I can tell Indesign resamples with the method Bicubic but Photoshop’s Bicubic Automatic may provide somewhat crisper results when downsampling.

Participant
April 2, 2019

Thanks for your answers!

I came up with one more problem regarding the sharpness of the pictures.

Since sharpness should be added to each individual size, how can I add sharpness after the PDF-export?
I read about LinkOptimizer and Elpical Claro, but is there any other solution / program to use?

Thanks for the help!

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

Enfocus PitStop Pro or Server would be my choice for sharpening within a PDF. A less productive approach would be to touch up/edit critical images in Photoshop by opening the image using Acrobat Pro.

Stephen Marsh
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

Download the images and compare in Photoshop...

Starting from a sharpened 300ppi original that I was “happy with”… Then placed into InDesign and scaled 50% for a 600ppi effective resolution, resampled to 300ppi on export:

Compared to an image that has been resized in Photoshop to 50% size and then sharpened to account for the softness introduced by resampling:

Compared to using Enfocus PitStop Pro to sharpen the first image that was placed into InDesign and scaled 50% for a 600ppi effective resolution before resampling to 300ppi:

It is undeniable that the first image resampled to 300ppi on export to PDF from InDesign is softer than the other two images. However looking at the second and third image, they are comparable.

So for me, the most productive result is to resample on export and then use PitStop to sharpen the resampled images to account for the softness introduced by resampling down from a higher effective resolution.

Of course it is not as easy to test the above compared to not resampling and simply passing on the higher effective resolution to the RIP. Just as PDF exports and the old Distiller defaulted to resample images above a certain effective PPI value, many service providers workflow software and RIPs do the same… So even if you don’t resample and soften your sharp image.

From tests performed years ago, if memory serves correct the result of higher than necessary effective resolution on contone photographic image quality (not lineart) compared to the above examples is approximately similar to running a Gaussian blur on the image at an approximate setting of 0.3-0.5px (very minor softening).

jane-e
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

fridao52166849  wrote

or if I just can place the PSD-file and let Indesign do the resizing in the export to PDF?

But do I destroy the images by letting Indesign do the job?

Hi Frida,

I moved this from Photoshop to InDesign where you will get a better answer.

In InDesign you can drag-place your images to scale them (or scale them other ways). Watch the Links panel for the original ppi and the effective ppi. It’s the effective ppi that counts.

If the effective ppi is too low because you resize an image larger, it’s a problem. If you scale an image smaller and the ppi is high, you can take care of it in your pdf or print settings and pull it back down to 300 pixels per inch (ppi).

Jane

c.pfaffenbichler
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019
Watch the Links panel for the original ppi and the effective ppi. It’s the effective ppi that counts.

Foe a selected image the Information Panel also displays the information.

And with an appropriate preflight profile (created with the Preflight Panel) one can check all the images (and other elements) in an indd-file for resolution and other parameters.

c.pfaffenbichler
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 2, 2019

can place the PSD-file and let Indesign do the resizing in the export to PDF?

Yes, also the separation if needed.

But keep in mind that Indesign will by default not upsample, only downsample.

So if the image has 100ppi effective Resolution that would not be changed (except possibly in connection with Transparency Flattening).

What is the best solution to get the best quality?

(Theoretically) you should get better results if you scaled the images and re-sharpened them for the individually specific sizes.

In your case that would mean creating three images additional to the original and, quite frankly, I myself quite often find it not worth the effort.