Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello everyone,
I’m currently working on a project in Adobe InDesign and I’ve come across a challenge that I’m hoping someone here might be able to help with.
I’m trying to determine the rendering intent for vector objects, or objects in the LAB color space, so that it can be included in the output PDF. I know that for bitmap images, there’s a similar feature where you can select Image Color Settings from the Object menu and choose the rendering intent.
However, I’m struggling to find a similar option for vector objects or objects in the LAB color space. Does anyone know if this is possible in InDesign or do you have any alternative solutions? Any guidance or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you in advance for your help!
Once you Assign a rendering intent in the ID document, it should carry through.
Here's a simple test. Make a couple of files from a document with some LAB values you want to test.
It doesn't matter so much what your specific Color Settings rendering intents are (usually Relative Colorimetric), as you can override them in Assign Profile.
File 1, leave as default. Under Assign Profle leave the rendering intents as they are.
File 2, change the Rendering Intent to one you want to test, say Saturatio
...Copy link to clipboard
Copied
If you are looking for an object-by-object setting I don't think so, The rendering intent is incorporated in your Color Settings > Conversion Options, and, depending on how you Assign Profile (or not) will define whether the document uses those settings or is set to something different to override it. You do have the option in Assign Profiles to change the intent for different types of objects, but as far as I know, that's it. Of course, any externally placed image/object/vector with a differently assigned profile, will pass on the Engine and Intent defined in that profile.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
too bad but thank you for the answer!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
What's your end goal? Why are you concerned about this? (curious me)
The rendering intent is only important for the output device, be it press or screen. Your Lab values are not changed whatsoever in your exported PDF (assuming you've exported as No Conversion). So what you've defined in your Color Settings for output profile and intent is tagged accordingly in the PDF, so if you want to control the rendering intent, that's where you'd do it. Regardless, (and although this is rare these days) some output devices don't necessarily handle all intents anyway, and may change to the default, which is Relative Colorimetric; and there may be different output engines. You also have to consider some prepress workflows give the option to ignore anything embedded in the PDF which might "save you from yourself" from picking an old or inappropriate profile.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I hope I have understood your question correctly. My aim is to have a master file that will later be adapted to various output conditions. Therefore, I would like to have the option to control whether graphics come as close as possible to a color or whether saturation is the priority. In Acrobat, I can then take into account the respective rendering intents and convert them into a specific color space. It is not necessarily about sending it directly to an end device.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Once you Assign a rendering intent in the ID document, it should carry through.
Here's a simple test. Make a couple of files from a document with some LAB values you want to test.
It doesn't matter so much what your specific Color Settings rendering intents are (usually Relative Colorimetric), as you can override them in Assign Profile.
File 1, leave as default. Under Assign Profle leave the rendering intents as they are.
File 2, change the Rendering Intent to one you want to test, say Saturation. If you are only concerned about ID's object colors, just change the first item.
File 3, change to another, say Perceptual.
Export PDFs, No Conversion.
Even in Acrobat you will see the difference between the three files when you Preview selecting the Output Destination you desire. You can also test-render them into Photoshop to CMYK, as CMYK is pretty much where you are really concerned about how things convert.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
At the end of the day, I'm not sure how useful this "master" document will be for you. Unless you actually have printed samples of the end result of any of these conversions, anything you do on the screen is just simulated anyway.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I would be cautious with PDF with only profiles since there is a variety of results as to how files will render Black Point Compensation, and that setting has a big impact on the final result. LAB objects do not have a Colour Profile… but remember in today software there is no distinction between CIE Lab 2°/D50 or any other iluminant… and when you get really picky about colour that may be what breaks down the workflow. sRGB and Adobe RGB are D65 and most print profiles are D50… so there is a big amount of guesswork and assumptions.
Note allso that using "Edit object" from the "Use print production" tools you can get the "Properties…" by Right-clicking on an object . This gives you the information about the objects colour space and lets you convert to another ICC, etc… but again no setting for Black Point Compensation. (And all LAB assumes same illuminant.)
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
LAB rendering intent is set in the Colour settings, note that this is for new documents and that when you open a document this may have other settings and you may want to look at the Assign Document Profiles. The Solid colour rednering intent and the After-Blending intent both play in.
I would recommend using Perceptual for Solid intet if you have LAB since I don't see an option for Black Point Complensation. After Blending intent comes into paly when you have transparent objects. It is complicated and many parameters.