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Printing art book with rich blacks

New Here ,
Nov 12, 2022 Nov 12, 2022

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I feel like there are tons of posts about how to print with rich blacks but I can't figure out how to solve this issue I'm having. 
I'm formatting an art book (full page illustrations) that relies on having deep blacks -- all the CMYK tiffs the artist sent me show as the 100K regular black during the print preview and separations preview. I'm working in US Web Coated SWOP. Example below with a section of the original image vs print preview. 

 

Screen Shot 2022-11-12 at 8.07.04 PM.png

Screen Shot 2022-11-12 at 8.10.18 PM.png

  

I have a lot of images, is there a way to adjust the images or the InDesign file settings to use a rich black? There has to be an easier way that going through each individual image in photoshop and editing the blacks. I feel like I'm missing something very simple with this.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 12, 2022 Nov 12, 2022

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You cannot adjust the images in InDesign. If the images are RGB InDesign can convert them to CMYK on print or export, but it cannot greatly affect the colour in the images. This looks like a job for Photoshop.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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They are CMYK.

 

▒► ID-Tasker / ID-Tasker Server - work smart not hard ◄▒

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Are you sure this book is being printed on a web press, more likely on a sheet-fed press?

Don't use rich black for text, it'll probably reduce its readability. 

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New Here ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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I reached out to the printers to confirm -- there will be little to no text in this book, just illustrations.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Hi @M.Rezvani , can you share one of the images? You should be able to attach one to your reply.

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New Here ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Hi @rob day , I attached some files to a different response below.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Unfortunately, there is no other way - you need to edit each TIFF individually - you can't just treat all TIFFs the same way or you'll end up with some TIFFs too dark or still too dull.

 

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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InDesign can’t handle this for you. Photoshop could maybe help here, depending on your source files (TIFF? PSD?) If the black gradients are a separate layer, you could alter this layer/settings via batch processing or if that’s not enough, via scripting in Photoshop. For more help on this idea, it’s probably better to ask the question in the Photoshop sub-forum where the experts for this look at.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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What black gradients? Those are full color illustrations - CMYK TIFFs.

 

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Wait, why would they result in 100K if it’s a picture that was photographed in raw format (TIFF)? Then it’d be a matter of choosing the right raw files and importing them with the proper color profiles. Or am I wrong here?

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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But anyway, you can alter the colors of the TIFF in a batch automation in Photoshop to speed up the process of this. If the digitalisation photo was made equally for all illustrations, it should be straight forward and the same settings for each one. If not, there’s no way out of doing it individually for each picture.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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Example below with a section of the original image vs print preview.

 

Hi @M.Rezvani , Without seeing your CMYK files it looks like you might have Overprint/Separation Preview turned on and Proof Colors on with the Proof Setup set to Document CMYK (your print preview?). If your InDesign document has the US Web Coated SWOP CMYK profile assigned and the CMYK image is also assigned US Web Coated SWOP, there is no need to turn on Proof Colors because Overprint/Separation Preview is already showing the expected US Web Coated SWOP soft proof.

 

I can replicate your captures by double proofing. These examples have the same CMYK output values, but the bottom soft proof is wrong because I have both Overprint Preview and Proof Colors to Document CMYK turned on.

 

Screen Shot 16.png

 

If I export to the default PDF/X-4 preset Acrobat’s Output Preview uses the SWOP Output Intent profile for the default Simulation Profile, and the blacks are close to the SWOP 4-color black point:

 

Screen Shot 17.png

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Community Expert ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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A few questions before I weigh in:

First question, why they gave you pre-converted CMYK TIFFs to begin with. Unless they know exactly what press situation your are delaing with, that has the very definite possibility of "baking in" incorrect mixes. i.e. if they preconverted to an old profile like US Sheetfed, or even US Web Coared, which is so old and assumes a certain amount of press gain of "the day" that would make the blacks darker, you can very well get what I call "hollow" blacks now, as the press sitiations now are more accurate with less gain.

Is there a profile assigned to the CMYK TIFFS you were given? If you are viewing soft proofs on your screen (saving PDFs) where you are converting to a particilar Profile, you might be excasperating the problem.

"all the CMYK tiffs the artist sent me show as the 100K regular black"

This is troubling. Unless they were using a custom GCR curve with a Maximum Black assigned, this shouldn't happen.

Can you upload a small sample section of one of your problematic TIFFs?

 

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New Here ,
Nov 13, 2022 Nov 13, 2022

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First off, thank you so much for replying. I'm new to formatting images/books for print (clearly). 
The embedded color profiles are all over the place -- they're a mix of SWOP coated, generic CMYK, Japan 2001, no embedded profile, and a few RGB. I've attached a couple of the files I was given for this. 
I went back to spot check the CMYK values across the images -- that was an error on my end, only one of them seems to be giving 100K black, "2 high priestess". But all of them show very greyed out blacks when proof colors or overprint preview are selected. I don't color manage images when I receive them, but I keep the CMYK values the same, if that is helpful to know. I also reached out to the printer to get more info on what printing process will be used, in case it turns out I just have my settings wrong.
Thank you for all your help, this isn't a professional project so I'm very much learning as I go.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 14, 2022 Nov 14, 2022

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But all of them show very greyed out blacks when proof colors or overprint preview are selected

 

Hi @M.Rezvani Your sample images placed in an InDesign document with the matching US Web Coated SWOP CMYK profile assigned, are all document CMYK so you don’t need to turn on Proof Colors.

 

You would only use Proof Colors when you want a soft proof for some other device (something other than a US Web Coated SWOP offset press). With Proof Colors off, the preview is showing the expected output to your InDesign document’s CMYK profile, which I assume you want?

 

You can see the affect of a Document CMYK Proof Setup on the images as well as black native colors and swatches—even 0|0|0 RGB is adjusted:

 

Screen Shot 7.png

 

 

With the exception of the hair in the right image (which was edited in CMYK mode), there are no color corrections you could make to darken the blacks because they are already at the 300% maximum total ink allowed by the SWOP profile. Here I’ve set the Separation Preview’s Ink Limit to 295% so it is highlighting all of the output values between 295% and the 300% max:

 

Screen Shot 3.png

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Community Expert ,
Nov 15, 2022 Nov 15, 2022

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"only one of them seems to be giving 100K black, "2 high priestess""

Just on her hair. It looks like the artist has purposefully replaced the hair colour on the priestess AFTER converting to CMYK to 100K (probably through a bucket fill). This is not good for print as that means only black ink will print at that spot, and since there's only one ink, it will soak into the paper and become "grey". The hair should be rich Black to match the rest of the image (which seems fine otherwise*). Either YOU can do that, and bucket fill the hair with A Rich Black similar to other black areas (say 40C 40M 40Y 90K). Now, if the artist has done this on many images, you've got a lot of work to do.

 

*In any case, yes, your images have been converted to CMYK with slightly hollow blacks... but this is normal when using old-school profiles, like US Sheetfed and US Web, that usually have a 300% ink maximum. Older press situations had more gain than they do now, so the values in your image would have printed a bit darker on paper and look amazing. Newer profiles like GRACOL are more indicative of modern press situations where the press gain is a lot less than the old days and the max ink level can be a bit higher. If you print your images as they are now to such a press, the chance is you will have slightly greyish blacks since it can print the values in the file more accurately, but I doubt it will be noticeable. It would have been better if you were supplied with RGB images to begin with.

Here's an example:

Screen Shot 2022-11-15 at 12.13.05 PM.png

 On the left is the image as it exists now, converted to CMYK using US Web Coated. You can see that an area of black has about 300% maximum ink, and the actual Black layer is about 86%. I then converted the file to RGB and then back to CMYK using a GRACOL profile. The same area now has a higher max ink level, and the Black is a bit darker. On paper, this will be a more satisfying result.

 

That being said, using US Web Coated is not the end of the world. It's actually richer than US Sheetfed

 

Anyway, none of this helps you "automate" fixing all these files. You will need to look at them in Photoshop on an individual basis. Based on just these three examples, the artists were all over the place.

 

As a prepress person, what I would do, if I couldn't get original RGB files, is convert problematic files back to RGB, tweak the black levels if necessary, then LEAVE them as RGB. Our RIP will convert to the proper CMYK output according to our press situation. A lot of work, I know... but there ya go.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 15, 2022 Nov 15, 2022

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Hi Brad @ Roaring Mouse , I think @M.Rezvani , is bing mislead by a Proof Setup / Proof Colors soft proof—they mentioned that the problem occurs when Proof Colors is turned on, but doesn’t happen when Proof Colors and Overprint are turned off.

 

Open the attached file, set your Proof Setup to Document CMYK (not Custom...), turn on Proof Colors, and the black preview will shift without changing the output values (see my comparison capture above)

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Community Expert ,
Nov 15, 2022 Nov 15, 2022

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"black preview will shift without changing the output values"

Oh, I'm totally with ya; Yes it will. He may very well be, but that just helps to illustrate the issue with the black areas as currently pre-converted.

The last square is exactly how the hair in the priestess (100K) will look on the printed page... not what they want, I'm sure.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 16, 2022 Nov 16, 2022

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I’ve always looked at it as a bug—can’t think of any reason for the preview to change when the Proof Setup is Document CMYK (the 0|0|0 RGB Black fill is also wrong). It doesn’t happen in Photoshop and if you do a Custom Proof Setup with the profile set to the assigned CMYK Profile the soft proof doesn’t change.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 15, 2022 Nov 15, 2022

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Screen Shot 15.png

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New Here ,
Nov 17, 2022 Nov 17, 2022

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@rob day Brad @ Roaring Mouse 
Sorry for the late reply -- I read through the messages and that all makes sense to me. 
I'm working with a different printer this time, but on my last project the hard proof came back with very hollow blacks -- it was pretty jarring since it looked fine in InDesign and the digital proof. I'm thinking it may have been an issue with that particular printer and/or a possible miscommunication about how I exported the files.
For this project the people I'm working with don't want to pay for a hard proof so I'm extra stressed about making sure the colors display as accurate as possible pre-print. (I'd pay for a hard proof myself but I'm already doing this as a volunteer so I'm not keen on it.) I'm working with about 24 total images and about 1/3 are troublesome, so adjusting them individually won't be the end of the world. I also received more specific parameters for how this new printer wants their files exported, so fingers crossed there won't be any surprises. 
Thank you again for the advice and troubleshooting. I can't overstate how much I appreciate y'all's time and expertise. I hope y'all have a great day and upcoming weekend.

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Community Expert ,
Nov 17, 2022 Nov 17, 2022

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but on my last project the hard proof came back with very hollow blacks

 

If you delivered an all CMYK PDF, the printer may have forced a CMYK-to-CMYK conversion at output, which might explain the problem shadow transitions. That could easily happen if you delivered CMYK with TAC that exceeds the printer’s limit, forcing them to make an additional conversion.

 

Before you push the 300% total ink you already have in the files you shared, it might be worth communicating with the printer and find out if they are really going to output your 300%+ CMYK values unchanged. If they won’t output your document CMYK values you might be better off providing profiled RGB and let them make the final CMYK conversions.

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Participant ,
Jan 04, 2023 Jan 04, 2023

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With Proof Colours I think choosing the Document CMYK is the same as Custom... >SAME PROFILE> with "Simulate Black Ink" checked.

If you choose Custom... >SAME PROFILE> without "Simulate Black Ink" checked. I dont think you get the On Screen reduction.

I don't see how you can choose which option is more correct?

Screenshot 2023-01-04 at 10.50.25.png

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Community Expert ,
Jan 04, 2023 Jan 04, 2023

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There’s no need to turn on Proof Colors if you want to soft proof Document CMYK—just turn on Overprint/Separation Preview, and set your Appearance of Black Preference to Display All Blacks Accurately.

 

The document’s CMYK colors are already in the output CMYK space, and Overprint/Separation Preview displays RGB and Lab colors as they will convert into the document’s CMYK space. For RGB/Lab process colors Separation Preview shows the expected output numbers on a conversion to document CMYK.

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