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Designing the Adobe InDesign Way

Designing the Adobe InDesign Way

By : Andy Gardiner
4.6 (10)
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Designing the Adobe InDesign Way

Designing the Adobe InDesign Way

4.6 (10)
By: Andy Gardiner

Overview of this book

Adobe InDesign is the leading desktop publishing and layout software for producing brochures, magazines, flyers, books, posters, and a wide range of digital documents. It allows you to rapidly draft your documents with precise control over typography, images, positioning, alignment, color, and other interactive features. However, InDesign’s interface, tools, and workflows can be a bit challenging to get to grips with. This cookbook will assist you in building unparalleled InDesign workflows with tried and tested recipes. With Designing the Adobe InDesign Way, you’ll learn how to add and edit content, create color swatches, and use features such as tables, all while applying software best practices and techniques to ensure that your work is fast, efficient, and easily maintained. Additionally, you’ll explore advanced InDesign features such as text styles, parent pages, tables of contents, and pre-flighting. Finally, you’ll take a closer look at the many export options in InDesign and ways to truly maximize its capabilities. By the end of this book, you’ll be well equipped to draft and design your own projects while ensuring your work is compatible with industry standards for print and digital documents.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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Appendix: InDesign Tools Panel at a Glance

Hiding and showing image layers in InDesign

When you work with professional image editing tools such as Photoshop, you work with layers. This has several benefits, with the main one being that it allows you to edit and adjust items independently of each other.

Only certain file types support layers, though, and if you save your files in formats such as JPG or PNG, they will be flattened. This means that all the layers will be merged into a single layer and you will lose all the benefits of working with multi-layered files.

By saving your files in the native Photoshop PSD format, not only are all the layers retained but you can access them from within InDesign, allowing you to hide and show layers without the need to return to Photoshop every time.

In this recipe, we are going look at how to enable and disable layers in InDesign, both as you import the file initially, and also later on while working within the document.

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