@designlikeapro Thank you so much for uploading tutorials on inDesign. I was recently made the creative editor for the magazine in a class project. I worked on it all throughout with RGB settings. With that in mind, would you recommend that I still convert to CMYK at this stage (ready for printing) or just stick to RGB and hope that the printing would more or less reflect the quality of the computer display? The magazine will be printed on a material similar to photo paper. Thank you! :)
@adrenalinerush369 Thanks for the feedback.If you watch my PDF presets tutorial it will show you that you can set your export settings to convert everything to CMYK when saving your final PDF. Major time saver. You will want to convert if you are having it printed. Otherwise your colors will not look right in the final print.
@adrenalinerush369 Thank you! :) Your videos are really lifesavers in understanding InDesign and Photoshop. Your efforts in making clear step by step directions in lay man terms are very much appreciated. I'll recommend your videos for the next class doing the same magazine project. Thank you again! :) Advance happy new year!
Why is there a slight color difference between an opened tiff file in photoshop & the thumbnail version in my file folder. I run into this alot. The file was originally done in RGB. It was simply resaved in the CMYK mode. When opened in photoshop it looks fine, but that small thumbnail preview is always slightly off going into a darker shade or even a greener shade, its never the same as the opened tiff file. The jpeg file colors stay consistent between the opened file and the thumbnail.
@Waterfrontjoe Photoshop will apply it's own colour profile to everything you open in it, or to whatever it has embedded within the file. It'll be using the colour profile your operating system is using when in the thumbnail in Finder or Explorer and will ignore the embedded profile if it has one. I don't think JPEG have the same embedded profile ability that TIFF does, or it's different at least. TIFF is aimed at HQ printing, it's kind of the AIFF/WAVE of the design world. JPG is like MP3.
sweet designs in your portfolio =] I recently made my first portfolio piece (according to my typography professor) It was the most exciting thing ever! lol
@designlikeapro Thank you so much for uploading tutorials on inDesign. I was recently made the creative editor for the magazine in a class project. I worked on it all throughout with RGB settings. With that in mind, would you recommend that I still convert to CMYK at this stage (ready for printing) or just stick to RGB and hope that the printing would more or less reflect the quality of the computer display? The magazine will be printed on a material similar to photo paper. Thank you! :)
adrenalinerush369 2 months ago in playlist More videos from designlikeapro
@adrenalinerush369 Thanks for the feedback.If you watch my PDF presets tutorial it will show you that you can set your export settings to convert everything to CMYK when saving your final PDF. Major time saver. You will want to convert if you are having it printed. Otherwise your colors will not look right in the final print.
designlikeapro 2 months ago
@adrenalinerush369 Thank you! :) Your videos are really lifesavers in understanding InDesign and Photoshop. Your efforts in making clear step by step directions in lay man terms are very much appreciated. I'll recommend your videos for the next class doing the same magazine project. Thank you again! :) Advance happy new year!
adrenalinerush369 2 months ago
Why is there a slight color difference between an opened tiff file in photoshop & the thumbnail version in my file folder. I run into this alot. The file was originally done in RGB. It was simply resaved in the CMYK mode. When opened in photoshop it looks fine, but that small thumbnail preview is always slightly off going into a darker shade or even a greener shade, its never the same as the opened tiff file. The jpeg file colors stay consistent between the opened file and the thumbnail.
Waterfrontjoe 5 months ago
@Waterfrontjoe Photoshop will apply it's own colour profile to everything you open in it, or to whatever it has embedded within the file. It'll be using the colour profile your operating system is using when in the thumbnail in Finder or Explorer and will ignore the embedded profile if it has one. I don't think JPEG have the same embedded profile ability that TIFF does, or it's different at least. TIFF is aimed at HQ printing, it's kind of the AIFF/WAVE of the design world. JPG is like MP3.
TalesOfWar 1 month ago
sweet designs in your portfolio =] I recently made my first portfolio piece (according to my typography professor) It was the most exciting thing ever! lol
SamusWins 1 year ago
@SamusWins Thanks. Those are magazine designs that you get a glimpse of in the video!
designlikeapro 1 year ago
Awesome video. Thank you so much!
MrSaniful 1 year ago
Thanks!
HallounNizar 1 year ago
Great video. I am learning so much from your videos.
7Nubi 1 year ago
I always like to learn from your tutorial, Nikki...good job as usual :)
arnoldhenry758 1 year ago
@arnoldhenry758 Thanks! I appreciate you always tuning in and that you learn something from my tutorials.
designlikeapro 1 year ago