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Pixelated Object Effect (drop shadow, etc.)

Contributor ,
Feb 28, 2019 Feb 28, 2019

Hi all,

I notice that the object style -> effects are really LQ in my working document. Can anyone tell me how to fix this issue?

Here's how it looks in the .indd file at 1600%

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 10.51.11 PM.png

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 10.52.10 PM.png

And here's my pdf export setting:

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 10.57.45 PM.png

And here's how it looks at 1600% as an exported pdf:

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 11.00.15 PM.png

Where did it go wrong? Is it possible to make these effects look really smooth while I'm working from InDesign? I've searched around is it about Transparency Flattener Presets? If so, I can't seem to select High Resolution. Every time I try to select HR and click ok:

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 10.53.43 PM.png

It automatically reverts back to Low Resolution:

Screen Shot 2019-02-28 at 10.53.54 PM.png

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Mar 01, 2019 Mar 01, 2019

Where did it go wrong? Is it possible to make these effects look really smooth while I'm working from InDesign?

If this is for print, I think you have to keep the magnification level in perspective. For better performance, InDesign uses lower resolution proxies for images and bitmap effects like drop shadows, which will look coarser at high magnifications.

But the pixels don’t actually get printed, they have to get converted into a screen (halftone or stochastic), which creates the illusion of t

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Community Expert ,
Feb 28, 2019 Feb 28, 2019

Hi wuts23143389 ,

I don't think you can fix this.

Transparency Flattener Presets cannot help here.

Regards,
Uwe

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Contributor ,
Mar 01, 2019 Mar 01, 2019

Thank you very much for your reply Uwe!

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Community Expert ,
Mar 01, 2019 Mar 01, 2019
LATEST

Where did it go wrong? Is it possible to make these effects look really smooth while I'm working from InDesign?

If this is for print, I think you have to keep the magnification level in perspective. For better performance, InDesign uses lower resolution proxies for images and bitmap effects like drop shadows, which will look coarser at high magnifications.

But the pixels don’t actually get printed, they have to get converted into a screen (halftone or stochastic), which creates the illusion of the gradient. The screen is quite coarse relative to the image pixels, so viewing at 1600% would be the equivalent of magnifying the printed page with a powerful loupe.

Here is a halftone screen simulation of 12 point text with a drop shadow, "RIP’d" into Photoshop at 2400ppi, and converted to a 1-bit, 175LPI, halftone screen. The image on the right is what actually gets printed.

Screen Shot 1.png

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