- About printing
- Print a document or book
- Printing documents with multiple page sizes
- Specifying pages to print
- Specify paper size and page orientation
- Choose which layers are printed or exported to PDF
- Printing to non-PostScript language printers
- Print as bitmap
- Preview documents
- Setting up a printer
- Use print presets
For detailed information and instructions, click the links below.
About printing
Whether you are providing a multicolored document to an outside service provider, or just sending a quick draft of a document to an inkjet or laser printer, knowing a few basics about printing will make the print job go more smoothly, and help to ensure that the finished document appears as intended.
Types of printing
When you print a file, Adobe InDesign sends it to a printing device—either to be printed directly on paper or to a digital printing press, or to be converted to a positive or negative image on film. In the latter case, the film can then be used to create a master plate for printing by a commercial press.
Types of images
The simplest types of images, such as text, use only one color in one level of gray. A more complex image is one with color tones that vary within the image. This type of image is known as a continuous-tone image. A photograph is an example of a continuous-tone image.
Halftoning
To create the illusion of continuous tone, images are broken down into a series of dots. This process is called halftoning. Varying the sizes and densities of the dots in a halftone screen creates the optical illusion of variations of gray or continuous color in the printed image.
Color separation
Artwork that will be commercially reproduced and that contains more than a single color must be printed on separate master plates, one for each color. This process is called color separation.
Getting detail
The detail in a printed image results from a combination of resolution and screen frequency. The higher an output device’s resolution, the finer (higher) the screen frequency you can use.
Duplex printing
Printer-specific features such as duplex printing are available when you click the Printer button in the Print dialog box. Duplex printing is available only if the printer supports it. For information on duplex printing, see your printer documentation.
Transparent objects
If the artwork contains objects with transparency features that you added using the Effects panel or the Drop Shadow or Feather commands, the transparent artwork will be flattened according to settings in the flattener preset you choose. You can affect the ratio of rasterized images to vector images in the printed artwork.
For more information on printing, see the Adobe Print Resource Center at www.adobe.com/go/print_resource. To troubleshoot printing problems, see www.adobe.com/go/learn_id_printtrouble.
Print a document or book
Settings you specify in the Print dialog box are saved with the document.
Page printing options
You can print all pages, even or odd pages only, a series of individual pages, or a contiguous range.
- Range
- Specifies the range of pages to print in the current document.
Indicate numbers in a range by using a hyphen, and indicate multiple
pages or ranges by using commas or spaces. (See Specifying pages to print.)
If the document includes pages with different page sizes, you can use the options above the Range field to select all pages of the same size. (See Printing documents with multiple page sizes.)
- Sequence
- Choose All Pages to print all pages of a document. Choose Even Pages Only or Odd Pages Only to print only those pages within the specified range. These options are unavailable when you are using the Spreads or Print Master Pages options.
- Spreads
- Prints pages together, as if they were bound, or printed
on the same sheet. You can print only one spread per sheet. If the
new page is larger than the currently selected paper size, InDesign
prints as much as it can, but won’t automatically scale the page
to fit the imageable area, unless you select Scale
To Fit in the Setup area of the Print dialog box. You may also want
to specify landscape orientation.Note: If different trapping styles are applied to pages in the spread, InDesign resolves the differences.
- Print Master Pages
- Prints all master pages, rather than document pages. Selecting this option makes the Ranges option unavailable.
Examples of page ranges
Page range |
Pages printed |
|---|---|
11- |
Page 11 to the last page of the document. |
-11 |
All pages up to and including page 11. |
+11 |
Page 11 only. |
-+11 |
All pages up to and including page 11. |
+11- |
All pages from the eleventh page to the end of document. |
1, 3-8, |
Page 1, plus pages 3 to 8. |
+1, +3-+8, |
Page 1, plus pages 3 to 8. |
Sec1 |
All pages in section labeled “Sec1”. |
Sec2:7 |
Page numbered 7 (not necessarily the seventh page of that section) in section labeled “Sec2.” |
PartB:7- |
Page numbered 7 in section labeled “PartB” to last page of section. |
Chap2:7-Chap3 |
Page 7 in section labeled “Chap2” to end of section labeled “Chap3”. |
Sec4:3-Sec4:6, Sec3:7 |
Pages 3–6 in “Sec4” and page 7 in “Sec3”. |
Options for printing objects
The General area of the Print dialog box contains options for printing elements usually visible only on-screen, such as grids and guides. Choose from the following options:
- Print Layers
- Determine which layers are printed. (See Choose which layers are printed or exported to PDF.)
- Print Non-printing Objects
- Prints all objects, regardless of your settings to selectively prevent individual objects from printing.
- Print Blank Pages
- Prints all pages in the specified page range, even if no text or objects appear on a page. This option is unavailable when you are printing separations. If you are using Print Booklet for composite printing, use the Print Blank Printer Spreads option to print blank spreads added to fill out composite signatures.
- Print Visible Guides and Baseline Grids
- Prints visible guides and grids in the same color as shown in the document. You can control which guides and grids are visible in the View menu. This option is unavailable when you are printing separations.
Printing documents with multiple page sizes
You may want to print pages that have different sizes separately. An option in the Print dialog box makes it easy to specify a range that selects all the pages of the same size in the document.
Before you submit a document with multiple page sizes for printing, ask the print provider about special requirements. If you have difficulties printing a document with multiple page sizes, consider dividing it into separate documents.
Choose File > Print.
In the General panel, select or deselect Spreads to determine whether pages or spreads are printed.
If a spread includes pages of different sizes, the largest width and height on the spread determines the spread size.
To print only pages of the same size, use the options above the Range field to select one of the pages or spreads, and then click the pages icon
.The Range field displays all the pages or spreads of that size.
After printing a range of one page size, repeat the steps to print other page sizes.
Specifying pages to print
You can specify a page range using either absolute numbering (the page’s position in the current document) or page/section numbering (the section and page numbers assigned to the page). By default, dialog boxes in InDesign honor the format specified for Page Numbering in the Preferences dialog box.
When Absolute Numbering is selected, numbers you specify for pages or page ranges correspond to the absolute position of pages in your document. For example, to print the third page in the document, you would enter “3” for Range in the Print dialog box.
When Section Numbering is selected in the Preferences dialog box, you can enter pages and page ranges exactly as they appear in your layout or using absolute numbering. For example, if the page labeled SecA:5 is the fifteenth page in your document, you could print it by entering “SecA:5” in the Print dialog box or by entering “+15”. The “+” sign indicates that you want to override the normal section and page numbering to use absolute page numbering.
If you are unsure which format to use when entering
page numbers in the Print dialog box, imitate the format used in
the page box at the bottom of the document window.Specify paper size and page orientation
It’s important to distinguish between page size (as defined in the Document Setup dialog box for your document) and paper size (the sheet of paper, piece of film, or area of the printing plate you’ll print on). Your page size might be US Letter (8.5-by-11 inches), but you might need to print on a larger piece of paper or film to accommodate any printer’s marks or the bleed and slug areas.
The list of paper sizes available to InDesign comes from the PPD (PostScript printers) or from the printer driver (non-PostScript printers). If the printer and PPD you’ve chosen for PostScript printing support custom paper sizes, you’ll see a Custom option in the Paper Size menu.
Most imagesetters can accommodate regular paper sizes, such as letter and tabloid, as well as transverse orientation, where the regular page size is rotated 90° when printed. The transverse orientation is often a more efficient use of imagesetter media.

- A.
- Letter (tall orientation)
- B.
- Custom page size (tall orientation)
- C.
- Letter (transverse orientation)
Paper sizes are listed by familiar names (such as Letter). The dimensions define the limits of the imageable area—the total paper size, less any unprintable border used by the printer or imagesetter. Most laser printers cannot print to the exact edge of a page.
If you select a different paper size (for example, if you change from Letter to Legal), the document is rescaled in the preview window. The preview window displays the entire imageable area of the selected page; when the preview size is changed, the preview window automatically rescales to include the imageable area.

Specify paper size and orientation

- A.
- Portrait
- B.
- Landscape
- C.
- Reverse Portrait
- D.
- Reverse Landscape
Specify a custom paper size
If you’re using a printer that accommodates various paper sizes, such as a high-resolution imagesetter, you can specify a custom paper size when you print. InDesign makes the custom option available only if the selected PPD supports custom paper sizes.
The largest custom paper size you can specify depends on the maximum imageable area of your imagesetter. For more information, consult the documentation for your specific printer.
Printing to non-PostScript language printers
You can print a document on a non-PostScript language printer. However, because PostScript is the standard page-description language for professional publishing, many high-end color and graphics features, such as screen frequencies or color separations, cannot be reproduced on non-PostScript printers. Most imported graphics file formats print acceptably. In general, a document printed to a non-PostScript printer should look the way it appears on-screen when you view the document using Preview Mode.
Some vendors sell software programs that add
PostScript-language capability to a non-PostScript language printer.
Check with your software reseller for availability and compatibility.Print as bitmap
When you print to a non-PostScript printer, you can choose to rasterize all artwork during printing. This option is useful when printing documents that contain complex objects (such as objects with smooth shading or gradients) because it reduces the possibility of errors.
Preview documents
You can view how the document’s pages fit on the chosen paper size before you print to a PostScript printer. A preview in the lower-left area of the Print dialog box shows whether your paper and orientation settings will work for your page size. When you select different options in the Print dialog box, the preview updates dynamically with the combined effects of your print settings.
- Choose File > Print.
- Click the preview image in the lower-left area of the Print dialog box.
The preview has three views:
- Standard view
- Displays the relationship of a document page to the media.
It shows the effects of various options such as paper size to imageable
area, bleed and slug areas, and page marks, as well as the effects
of tiling and thumbnails.
Four different page-fit settings in Standard view- A.
- Default
- B.
- Spreads
- C.
- Orientation
- D.
- 2-by-2 Thumbnails
- Text view
- Lists the numerical values for certain print settings.
- Custom page/Cut sheet views
- Displays the effects of different print settings, depending
on your page size. For custom page sizes, the preview shows how
the media fits on the custom output device; the maximum supported
media dimensions of the output device; and the settings for offset,
gap, and transverse. For cut sheets, such as Letter and Tabloid,
the preview shows the relationship of the imageable area to the
media size.
In both the custom page and cut sheet views, the preview also indicates the output mode using an icon: Separations
, Composite
Grayscale
, Composite CMYK
, or
Composite RGB
.
Custom page view (left) and cut sheet view (right)- A.
- Direction of media travel
- B.
- Transverse deselected
- C.
- Paper size
- D.
- Media
- E.
- Imageable area
- F.
- Media
Setting up a printer
InDesign supports printing to both PostScript® (Level 2 and 3) and non-PostScript language printers, using most current printer drivers. When you print to a PostScript printer, InDesign uses information from a PostScript Printer Description (PPD) file to determine which settings to display in the Print dialog box.
Follow these basic steps when setting up a printer:
Install the latest printer driver for your output device. See your operating system documentation for instructions.
For PostScript printing, select a PPD file when you set up your printer.
About printer drivers
A printer driver lets you directly access printer features from applications on your computer. Having the correct driver ensures that you have access to all of the features a particular printer supports.
Adobe recommends upgrading to the latest driver for your operating system.
Accessing printer driver features
Printer drivers may support features that are not included in InDesign, such as duplex printing. Support for these features varies depending on the printer driver you have. Check with your printer manufacturer for details.
If you want to specify settings for a specific printer, InDesign provides access to the printer driver through the following buttons in the InDesign Print dialog box. (When you choose to print to a PostScript file, these options are not available.)
- Setup
- (Windows) This button opens the Windows Print dialog box.
- Page Setup
- (Mac OS) This button displays the standard Mac OS Page Setup dialog box.
- Printer
- (Mac OS) This button displays the standard Mac OS
Print dialog box. Note: Some InDesign printing features appear in both the printer driver dialog boxes and the InDesign Print dialog box. For best results, specify the settings in the InDesign Print dialog box only. If settings overlap, InDesign tries to synchronize the settings, or to ignore the driver’s settings. Some printer driver features (for example, N‑up printing, which prints the same artwork multiple times on the same page) produce adverse printing results when used with InDesign features such as separations.
Select a PPD file
A PPD file (PostScript Printer Description file) customizes the behavior of the driver for your specific PostScript printer. It contains information about the output device, including printer-resident fonts, available media sizes and orientation, optimized screen frequencies, screen angles, resolution, and color output capabilities. It’s important to set up the correct PPD before you print. Selecting the PPD that corresponds to your PostScript printer or imagesetter populates the Print dialog box with the available settings for the output device. You can switch to a different one to suit your needs. Applications use the information in the PPD file to determine which PostScript information to send to the printer when printing a document.
For best printing results, Adobe recommends that you obtain the latest version of the PPD file for your output device from the manufacturer. Many print service providers and commercial printers have PPDs for the imagesetters they use. Be sure to store PPDs in the location specified by the operating system. For details, consult the documentation for your operating system.
In Windows and in Mac OS, you select
a PPD file in the same way you add a printer. The steps for selecting
a PPD file are different for each platform. See your operating system
documentation for details.
Use print presets
If you regularly output to different printers or job types, you can automate print jobs by saving all output settings as print presets. Using print presets is a fast, reliable way to print jobs that require consistently accurate settings for many options in the Print dialog box.
You can save and load print presets, making it easy to back them up or to make them available to your service providers, clients, or others in your workgroup.
You can create and review print presets in the Print Presets dialog box.
Create print presets
Do one of the following:Choose File > Print, adjust print settings, and click Save Preset. Type a name or use the default, and then click OK. With this method, the preset is saved in the preferences file.
Choose File > Print Presets > Define, and then click New. In the dialog box that appears, type a new name or use the default, adjust print settings, and then click OK to return to the Print Presets dialog box. Then click OK again.
Apply print presets
- Choose File > Print.
- Choose a print preset from the Print Preset menu. If you like, confirm the printer settings in the Print dialog box.
- Click Print.
Edit print presets
Do one of the following:Choose File > Print, adjust print settings, and click Save Preset. In the Save Preset dialog box that appears, either type a name in the text box or use the current name. (If the current name is an existing preset, saving overwrites that preset’s settings.) Click OK.
Choose File > Print Presets > Define, select a preset from the list, and then click Edit. Adjust print settings, and click OK to return to the Print Presets dialog box. Then click OK again.
You
can edit the default preset as you would any other using the steps
outlined above.

