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Participating Frequently
November 10, 2020
Question

Poor quality image when i copy and paste from in design to photoshop

  • November 10, 2020
  • 6 replies
  • 4237 views

Poor quality image when i copy and paste from in design to photoshop. Please help!

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6 replies

Jumpenjax
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 27, 2022

If the original picture in indesign was low resolution. That can cause blurry photo when pasted in photoshop.

Do you have the original.

 

I have a suggestion if you don't. in InDesign go to the photo and enlarge it on you screen as long as it is still clear. Then take a screen shot. It will be at least 144 ppi. Then open inphoto shop and make it 300 ppi and reduce to the size you need.

Lee- Graphic Designer, Print Specialist, Photographer
rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 27, 2022

I don’t think the OP is going to see these new posts because the last time they logged in was 2 years ago, but when I copy and paste from InDesign to Photoshop, I get a vector Smart Object, so the pasted object takes on the resolution of the destination file:

 

Pasting into a 72ppi doc is an obvious problem especially for text objects:

 

 

But 600ppi resolves the text correctly when viewed at Print or Actual size:

 

Mohit Goyal
Community Manager
Community Manager
July 27, 2022

Hi there,

 

Take a look at the following article to prevent color mismatch and file pixelation issues while moving Photoshop files to InDesign: https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/using/photoshop-assets-in-indesign.html

 

Let us know if that helps.

Thanks,

Mohit

jane-e
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 27, 2022

@Mohit Goyal wrote:

Take a look at the following article to prevent color mismatch and file pixelation issues while moving Photoshop files to InDesign: https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/using/photoshop-assets-in-indesign.html

 

Thank you, Mohit, but the OP was asking about the opposite: copying from InDesign to Photoshop. This thread is from November 2020.

 

Jane

 

 

Mike Witherell
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 10, 2020

"I do the graphics in ID & then copy & paste graphics to PS."

Bear in mind that this is an inherently incorrect workflow. Why not build the entire cover art in PS and set the book title type in PS as long as you save the file as a PS PDF you can have typesetting AND high-res output.

Mike Witherell
Participating Frequently
November 10, 2020

Mike, 

Thank you for your response. If you can find how to apply effects such as "bevel", "emboss", and "drop shadow" in photoshop, please let me know. Otherwise, I need to do these things in Indesign.

jmlevy
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 10, 2020

Why don't you create a single PSD file including the background and the woman (on separate layers) then import this PSD file in InDesign? Duplicate the image frame and hide the background layer and create a text frame between the 2 images frame

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 10, 2020

This thread has a Javascript that  will export InDesign layers to Photoshop layers:

 

https://community.adobe.com/t5/indesign/indesign-layers-to-photoshop-js-version/td-p/11484245?page=1

JonathanArias
Legend
November 10, 2020

instead of that method, how about you open the image from photoshop. what happens than?

Participating Frequently
November 10, 2020

I actually do open both images in PS. I do the graphics in ID & then copy & paste graphics to PS. From there I can layer as needed & then export that image back to ID to finish.

Participating Frequently
November 10, 2020

jane-e
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 10, 2020

What are you copying? Text? A graphic? A screenshot?

 

If it is an image that was was properly placed as a linked file, then right-click the image and edit it in PS from inside InDesign.

 

Also, what zoom level are do you have in Photoshop?

 

~ Jane

Participating Frequently
November 10, 2020

Hi Jane,

I want to use the layer capabilities of PS and the text capabilities of ID for example I have a background, then text, then a human subject mask that partially covers the text for effect. I do like to edit the background with the technique you described but to get all the layers, I think i need to move them to photoshop to get the effect, then move them back to ID to finish up as a book cover with all the bleed and margin capability of ID. When i copy in ID & paste in PS, the quality goes from 300 dpi to 72 dpi.

JonathanArias
Legend
November 10, 2020

sounds like you need to make your cover design in photoshop, and place in indesign? 

 

can you show us with screenshots?