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Importing other graphics formats
InDesign
supports a variety of graphics formats, including bitmap formats
such as TIFF, GIF, JPEG, and BMP, and vector formats such as EPS.
Other supported formats include DCS, PICT, WMF, EMF, PCX, PNG, and
Scitex CT (.sct). You can import an SWF file as a movie file.
TIFF (.tif) filesTIFF
is a flexible bitmap image format supported by virtually all painting,
image-editing, and page-layout applications. Also, virtually all
desktop scanners can produce TIFF images.
The TIFF format supports CMYK, RGB, grayscale, Lab, indexed-color,
and bitmap files with alpha and spot-color channels. You can select
an alpha channel when you place a TIFF file. Spot-color channels
appear in InDesign as spot colors in the Swatches panel.
You can use an image-editing program such as Photoshop to create
a clipping path to create a transparent background for a TIFF image.
InDesign supports clipping paths in TIFF images and recognizes encoded
OPI comments.
Graphics Interchange Format (.gif) filesGraphics
Interchange Format (GIF) is a standard for displaying graphics on
the World Wide Web and other online services. Because it compresses
image data without losing detail, its compression method is called lossless.
Such compression works well with graphics that use a limited number
of solid colors such as logos and charts; however, GIF cannot display
more than 256 colors. For this reason it is less effective for displaying
photographs online (use JPEG instead) and is not recommended for
commercial printing. If an imported GIF file contains transparency,
the graphic interacts only where the background is transparent.
JPEG (.jpg) filesThe
Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) format is commonly used
to display photographs and other continuous-tone images in HTML
files over the web and in other online media. The JPEG format supports
CMYK, RGB, and grayscale color modes. Unlike GIF, JPEG retains all
of the color information in an RGB image.
JPEG uses an adjustable, lossy compression scheme
that effectively reduces file size by identifying and discarding
extra data not essential to the display of the image. A higher level
of compression results in lower image quality; a lower level of
compression results in better image quality, but a larger file size.
In most cases, compressing an image using the Maximum quality option
produces a result that is indistinguishable from the original. Opening
a JPEG image automatically decompresses it.
Note: JPEG encoding, which can be performed on an EPS or DCS file
in an image-editing application such as Photoshop, does not create
a JPEG file. Instead, it compresses the file using the JPEG compression
scheme explained above.
JPEG works well for photographs, but solid-color JPEG images
(images that contain large expanses of one color) tend to lose sharpness.
InDesign recognizes and supports clipping paths in JPEG files created
in Photoshop. JPEG can be used for both online and commercially
printed documents; work with your prepress service provider to preserve
JPEG quality in printing.
Bitmap (.bmp) filesBMP
is the standard Windows bitmap image format on DOS and Windows-compatible
computers. However, BMP does not support CMYK, and its color support
is limited to 1, 4, 8, or 24 bits. It is less than ideal for commercially
printed or online documents, and it is not supported by some web
browsers. BMP graphics can provide acceptable quality when printed
on low-resolution or non-PostScript printers.
Encapsulated PostScript (.eps) filesThe Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file
format is used to transfer PostScript language artwork between applications,
and is supported by most illustration and page-layout programs.
Typically, EPS files represent single illustrations or tables that
are placed into your layout, but an EPS file can also represent
a complete page.
Because they are based on the PostScript language, EPS files
can contain both vector and bitmap graphics. Since PostScript cannot
normally be displayed on‑screen, InDesign creates a bitmap preview
for an EPS file for on‑screen display. If you print a page with
an EPS file to a non-PostScript printer, only this screen-resolution
preview will be printed. InDesign recognizes clipping paths in Photoshop-created
EPS files.
When you import an EPS file, any spot colors it contains are
added to the Swatches panel in InDesign. EPS allows for prepress-quality
resolution, precision, and color. This format includes all of the
color and image data required to color-separate DCS images embedded
in the EPS graphic. EPS isn’t ideal for online publishing in HTML,
but it works well for online publishing in PDF.
EPS files can contain Open Prepress Interface (OPI) comments,
which let you use fast, low‑resolution versions (proxies)
of images for positioning on a page. For final output, either InDesign
or your prepress service provider can automatically replace the
proxies with high-resolution versions.
Desktop Color Separations (.dcs) filesDesktop
Color Separations (DCS), developed by Quark, is a version of the standard
EPS format. The DCS 2.0 format supports multichannel CMYK files with multiple
spot channels. (These spot channels appear as spot colors in the Swatches
panel in InDesign.) The DCS 1.0 format supports CMYK files without spot
channels. InDesign recognizes clipping paths in Photoshop-created
DCS 1.0 and DCS 2.0 files.
DCS files are intended to be used in a preseparated, host-based
workflow. In most cases, color separations files associated with
a DCS image are excluded when you export or print a composite to
a PDF, EPS, or PostScript file. (The sole exception is made for
8‑bit DCS files that were created in Photoshop and that do not contain vector
graphics.)
InDesign can rebuild a composite image from DCS 2.0 or 1.0 separations
files, if the files were created in Photoshop. For best results,
do not include DCS 1.0 files or DCS 2.0 files created in programs
other than Photoshop when you are creating high-resolution color
composite proofs or separating a document in‑RIP or from a composite
file.
Macintosh PICT (.pict) filesThe
Macintosh PICT (or Picture) format is used for Mac OS
graphics and page-layout applications, and for transferring files
between applications. The PICT format compresses images that contain
large areas of solid color. InDesign can import PICT files created
from Mac OS screenshots and a variety of other applications,
including clip art collections. However, PICT files are not recommended
for high-resolution commercial printing.
InDesign supports RGB PICT images with variable resolutions and
embedded QuickTime images. PICT graphics do not support color separations,
are device-dependent, and are not recommended for high-resolution
commercial printing. The PICT format can provide acceptable quality
only when printed on low-resolution or non-PostScript printers.
Windows Metafile Format (.wmf) and Enhanced Metafile Format (.emf) filesWindows Metafile Format (WMF) and Windows
Enhanced Metafile Format (EMF) are native Windows formats used primarily
for vector graphics, such as clip art, shared between Windows applications.
Metafiles may contain raster image information; InDesign recognizes
the vector information and provides limited support for raster operations.
Color support is limited to 16‑bit RGB, and neither format supports
color separations. Metafile formats are not an ideal choice for commercially
printed or online documents; they provide acceptable quality only when
printed on low-resolution or non-PostScript printers from a Windows desktop.
PCX (.pcx) filesThe PCX format
is commonly used in Windows systems. Most Windows software supports
version 5 of the PCX format.
The PCX format supports RGB, indexed-color, grayscale, and bitmap
color modes, as well as the RLE compression method, which is lossless.
It does not support alpha channels. Images can have a bit depth
of 1, 4, 8, or 24 bits. However, PCX is not ideal for commercially
printed or online documents. PCX graphics can provide acceptable
quality only when printed on low-resolution or non-PostScript printers.
Portable Network Graphics (.png) filesThe Portable
Network Graphics (PNG) format uses adjustable, lossless compression
to display 24‑bit photographs or solid-color images on the World Wide
Web and in other online media. PNG was developed as a patent-free
alternative to the GIF file format. It supports transparency in
an alpha channel or a designated color. PNG is best used for online
documents, although its color support makes it better for printed
documents than GIF. However, color PNG graphics placed in an InDesign
document are RGB bitmap images, so they print only as composites,
not on color separations.
Scitex CT (.sct) filesThe Scitex Continuous
Tone (CT) format is used for high-end image processing on Scitex
computers. Scitex CT files often come from Scitex scanners, which produce
high-quality scans for commercial printing. The Scitex CT format supports
CMYK, RGB, and grayscale files, but does not support alpha channels. Contact
Scitex to obtain utilities for transferring files saved in the Scitex
CT format to a Scitex system.
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