Skip to main content
Participant
October 16, 2024
Answered

Which Is Better? PSD or JPG for Print Quality in InDesign

  • October 16, 2024
  • 3 replies
  • 885 views

My colleague  saves all his image files as psds or re-saves jpgs as psds for a magazine he designs in inDesign. Surely when inDesign exports to PDF, it compresses them to jpgs anyway? He said they print better if they're psds, any truth in that? It's taking up so much memory and an unnecessary task in my opnion - any truth in his theory?

 

<Title renamed by MOD>

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Willi Adelberger

If you have a jpg leave it as a jpg. Resaving as psd cannot improve the image. 

3 replies

Willi Adelberger
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 16, 2024

Both are correct. 
If you use transparency, layers or layer comps you need PSDs. 
If you have text or vectors in the image, use PDF/PDP. 

Participant
October 16, 2024

But you wouldn't take a jpg and save as a psd because ' it prints better as a psd'? 

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 16, 2024

No, that's ridiculous, unless, as I said, there's going to be multiple edits. Eventually, with JPG, you will degrade the image.

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 16, 2024

There is nothing inherently wrong with JPG but I wouldn't bother saving a PSD as JPG just for the sake of doing it. If there's a PSD, I would place that and be done with it. Makes editing easier, too. 

 

Shorter version: I doubt they print better unless the JPGs are overcompressed, but there's no reason to save a second file.

 

So I just re-read that and I had it backwards. Your colleague's workflow makes zero sense unless there's a lot of image editing going on.

Vivek-Sharma
Community Manager
Community Manager
October 16, 2024

Hi, Thank you for contacting us. Please refer to this link to learn more about selecting the right graphics format. 


^VS