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1

Is it possible to import a sheet from Excel keeping the fonts, sizes and colors?

Community Beginner ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

In case my question was too confusing, I will provide some context.

I need to update an art that will be printed and distributed across different departments in the company where I work. This artwork contains the birthdays of several employees, and the original file is an Excel sheet provided by HR. The thing is, we are looking for a way to make the changes each month as quickly and efficiently as possible. Despite already helping, I still need to make the changes (font, colors, size) manually.

Is there a way for InDesign to import the sheet with the settings I just mentioned, so I don’t have to manually change everything?

Sorry for any grammatical errors. English is not my first language.

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How to , Import and export
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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

You can link an excel spreadsheet when it is placed in Indesign. This will update the data while retaining the styling that has been applied. The first thing you need to do is turn on the Preferences > File Handling > "Create Links When Placing Text and Spreadsheets Files".  This creates a link to the excel file, and when the excel file is updated, the placed spreadsheet can be updated or relinked to a new file. Also having the placed spreadsheet styled with table and cell styles will help the process.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

Work with InDesign styles. Don't expect formatting to transfer from any MS product. MS applications use fonts in their applications which are not available to other apps. You can copy those fonts to your system level, but other limitations will provide many other probles. Therefore I strongly recommend to dismiss the Excel formatting.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

@Willi Adelberger What fonts are you referring to? If working on the same platform (even different physical computers) most fonts should be available. (An exception my be Aptos but that can be downloaded from Microsoft*.) If going cross-platform, this may happen but that's more of an OS difference and not Office apps.

 

* https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=106087

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

To answer your question about retaining the formatting, yes you can maintain the formats. They will come in reasonably close to Excel but keep in mind that Microsoft programs only use RGB colors and the measurement system is different between the programs. Also make sure you are using a cross-platform font if going between Mac and Windows.

 

You can still link to the Excel file as @Jeffrey_Smith mentioned. Just be sure to turn the preference off after you place the Excel file(s), so you don't link to anything you don't intend to. Also, if you link, any edits you make in InDesign will get wiped out when you update; edits must be made in Excel.

Excel:

image.png

 

Import Options:

image.png

InDesign:

image.png

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Beginner ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

I see. But my doubt is if i use custom fonts (Nunito and Rubik) in Excel Desktop, InDesign did not import the fonts, but instead, converted them to Calibri, without the proper size. I tried the same steps you took in the screenshots, and it did not work.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

Can you provide a step-by-step process of what you did? When I get back to my office I'll double check using custom fonts. Where did you get the font you mentioned?

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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Community Beginner ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

Both can be easily obtained in Google Fonts, here are they: https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Nunito and https://fonts.google.com/specimen/Rubik?query=rubik 

 

Lets say the tile is Rubik Bold Green and the body text is Nunito Blue. 

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Community Expert ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025
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Both fonts imported correctly from Excel, however, since Office apps don't support variable fonts, the weights did not match up. Both fonts are available from Adobe too. The Adobe versions seem to import weights correctly.

 

David Creamer: Community Expert (ACI and ACE 1995-2023)
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LEGEND ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

@Gabriely_Vitoria Silv2950 

 

Do it as a Data Merge.

 

Your XLS / CSV file will be a database - that you'll use as a DataSource for your template.

 

If you've ever done Data Merge in WORD - it works pretty much the same:

 

https://helpx.adobe.com/uk/indesign/using/data-merge.html

 

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Community Beginner ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

I tried that! Altough it didn't work for what i need, it's an incredible and useful tool. 

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LEGEND ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025
quote

I tried that! Altough it didn't work for what i need, it's an incredible and useful tool. 


By @Gabriely_Vitoria Silv2950

 

What do you mean "it didn't work"?

 

You need to prepare template - and then just use Data Merge to replace placeholders.

 

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LEGEND ,
Jan 27, 2025 Jan 27, 2025

@Gabriely_Vitoria Silv2950 

 

Here is an example - you just need to modify formatting of the placeholders:

 

https://community.adobe.com/t5/indesign-discussions/script-exporting-multiple-sinlge-page-pdf-s-name...

 

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