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Participant
January 13, 2015
Answered

How to remove blue highlights/outlining that surround a vector graphic that's been dropped in from illustrator

  • January 13, 2015
  • 4 replies
  • 63633 views

Does anyone know how to remove the blue highlights/outlining that appear around a vector graphic that's been dropped in from illustrator?

Correct answer Radha Krishna

Hi,

I hope you are asking about frame edges..

If that is the case choose View > Extras > Show/Hide Frame Edges.

Thanks,

RK Kommidi

4 replies

Known Participant
April 12, 2021

This worked to show the edges, but the edges still disappear when moving the item. I liked that feature to show me where I'm moving an item to. 

Radha Krishna
Radha KrishnaCorrect answer
Participant
October 30, 2017

Hi,

I hope you are asking about frame edges..

If that is the case choose View > Extras > Show/Hide Frame Edges.

Thanks,

RK Kommidi

Participant
April 21, 2021

thanx ever so much and i don't know why that extras was checked. problem solved! be safe!

Jongware
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 13, 2015

Sit back, close your eyes and repeat after me: "there are no blue outlines".

InDesign shows the bounding box and/or outline of objects. That is a good thing -- how else would you be able to see a white object on a white page?

InDesign shows the bounding box and/or outline of objects not "in blue" but in the color of the layer they reside on. That means you can immediately see on what layer an object lies.

InDesign shows outlines around your "Illustrator" artwork, not because it comes from Illustrator but because you pasted it as native InDesign artwork, and so InDesign's rules apply. You should not be doing this in the first place "by default"; for regular artwork you can simply import the AI document.

Finally, if the blue outlines really, really bother you and you cannot imagine what your document would look like without and you don't "want" to place the original file, there are still plenty options left. Go into Preview mode (see? no helpful lines anywhere!), or select "Hide Frame Edges" in the View menu.

Scott Falkner
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 30, 2017

Press the W key. W is for “Will someone get rid of these darned blue lines for me?”

vinny38
Legend
January 13, 2015

Hi there,

if by "dropped in from Illustrator", you mean dragged or pasted, I suggest you don't use that way and use "Import" function instead.

cu

Mike Witherell
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 30, 2017

The "import function" is the File > Place command, just in case that is not clear.

Mike Witherell