Posts Tagged ‘InDesign Secrets’

InDesign Secrets: Creating web graphics from your InDesign artwork

Published by | Thursday, August 2nd, 2012

It’s no secret that InDesign doesn’t have a Save for Web command—and yet, if you’ve carefully crafted a print document to your personal design specifications, you may have images created in InDesign that you want to use in your web content. In this week’s free InDesign Secrets episode, Anne-Marie Concepción reveals how to get around that lack of Save for Web command that designers have come to rely on in InDesign’s sister applications, Photoshop and Illustrator.

The first workaround option is simply to take a screenshot, open your screenshot in Photoshop, and use Photoshop’s Save for Web command. In the InDesign Secrets video above, you’ll see Anne-Marie’s advice for how to set proper resolution for just such an activity. Before you take your screenshot, make sure you’re in Preview mode and get rid of any extraneous information like non-printing characters. I used her advice for the graphic you see below, and on a bi-weekly basis, this is exactly the method I use to create the graphics we use in our InDesign Secrets posts.

Pink web graphic button used as an example of a web graphic saved for import into Photoshop.

A second option is to select an objects and use the Export command to save it as a JPEG, which allows you to set the color space and resolution. Even better, the third option, if you’re using InDesign CS5.5 or later, is to use the Object Export command to get the same options along with the ability to choose your own file format. Whichever way you choose, with these tricks you’ll no longer need to wait on Adobe to create a Save for Web command inside InDesign.

Meanwhile, Anne-Marie’s partner in InDesign secrecy, David Blatner, has an exclusive movie for lynda.com members this month called Using “No Language” to suppress unwanted hyphenation, spell-checking, and smart quotes, in which he reveals another ingenious workaround: how to use “No Language” in the Advanced Character Formats pane of the New Character Style dialog box to suppress unwanted automatic updates.

Anne-Marie and David will be back in two weeks with more InDesign Secrets!

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepción on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS6 New Features
 InDesign CS6 Essential Training
 InDesign FX

InDesign Secrets: Keeping a graphic in place with an invisible paragraph

Published by | Friday, July 6th, 2012

In this week’s free InDesign Secrets episode, Anne-Marie Concepcion reveals how to use a paragraph that’s invisible to the naked eye in order to create a design that holds your graphic where you want it when your document is exported as a single-column EPUB.

Let’s say for print you wanted to place a bio image out in the margin, to the left of your text, as seen in the example below:

InDesign document with image aligned to the left of text within the margin.

Graphics placed in the margin, to the left of your text, work fine for print.

When you export this same document as a single-column EPUB the image is automatically placed at the top of your text because the EPUB exports by document order and the first thing in the layout, reading left to right, is your bio image in the left margin.

InDesign document exported as single-column EPUB with margin image at top of column.

Any images in the left margin of your InDesign document will appear at the top of your column in your EPUB export.

So, what if you want your EPUB image to appear in the text-flow, between paragraph one and paragraph two, but you don’t have the luxury of using the margin (since it’s a single-column EPUB), and you don’t want to overset your text by making the image float between two paragraphs?

The trick is to anchor the graphic—in this example, David Blatner’s head shot—to the text via a paragraph carriage return that’s so small (.1 points) that it can’t be seen by a normal person. Then, when the document is converted to EPUB, your tiny paragraph carriage return automatically becomes a fully legitimate paragraph, and thus David’s head ends up properly placed in its own paragraph within the text, between your desired paragraphs. Making an “invisible” carriage return is a simple, quick solution that has a bunch of potential uses for fixing layout challenges.

EPUB document with graphic placed within text-flow using a tiny paragraph carriage return.

Using a tiny paragraph carriage return allows you to place your graphic within the text flow, without having to float your image and overset your text.

Meanwhile on lynda.com, Anne-Marie’s partner in InDesign secrecy, David Blatner, has a member-exclusive tutorial this week called how to use the baseline grid to align similar text in which he shows you how to use the baseline grid to align text in the same place vertically on multiple pages.

Have you ever employed stealth characters or paragraph in your work to make text or graphics behave in a special way? Do you have any tricks for aligning text across multiple InDesign pages? We’d love to hear your stealth tricks in the comments section below!

 

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS6 New Features
 InDesign CS6 Essential Training
• InDesign Styles in Depth

InDesign Secrets: How to properly format fractions

Published by | Thursday, June 21st, 2012

In this week’s InDesign Secrets episode, David Blatner unravels the mysteries (and hassles) of making fractions in InDesign text.

And we’re talking real fractions—not those regular-size numbers, both sitting on the baseline, separated by a common slash fake fractions like the one seen below left. David’s talking about properly scaled, baseline-shifted numerator, divided by a properly tilted fraction bar real fractions like the one seen below right:

Two styles of fractions made in InDesign.

There are two ways to make fractions in InDesign—the optimal, or "real" way seen above right, and the less-than-perfect "fake" way with regular-sized numbers sitting on the baseline, separated by a common slash, seen above left.

As David points out in the video tutorial, if you’re using an Open Type font, creating a properly scaled fraction is simply a matter of selecting the type and choosing Open Type > Fractions from the Control Panel menu. Of course, if your document is rife with fractions you’ll want a more efficient way to change all of your fractions at once, and for that, you’ll need to fearlessly tread into the world of GREP styles.

GREP styles search for a particular pattern in text—in this case “digit-slash-digit” (or, translated into  GREP, that’s “\d+/\d+”)—to apply a specific style denoted by you (in this case Open Type > Fractions). You can see in the video how to use this handy GREP feature to change all your fractions at the same time. David also shows you how to use another GREP style-replacement maneuver to remove unwanted spaces between your whole number and your fraction after you’ve properly scaled your fractions (these spaces will be there for fractions that have whole numbers associated with the fraction. For example, with a number like 18 3/4, the previously disproportioned “fake” fractions needed a space between the whole number, 18, and the fraction, 3/4).

Of course, this GREP automation relies on the use of an Open Type font. For cases where you don’t have the luxury, or desire, to use an Open Type font, David shows you how to manually create your own non-Open Type font proper fraction using Horizontal Scaling, Vertical Scaling, and offsets. By the time you’re through watching David’s less-than-nine-minute movie, you’ll never need to rely on an inelegant fake fraction again.

Meanwhile, for members of lynda.com, David’s partner in InDesign Secrecy, Anne-Marie Concepcion, has another member-exclusive video called Fixing unwanted hyperlinks in an imported Word file that offers a handy way to deal with what can be a maddening InDesign situation.

David and Anne-Marie will be back in two weeks with more InDesign Secrets!

 

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS6 New Features
 InDesign CS6 Essential Training
• InDesign Styles in Depth

 

InDesign Secrets: Adding diacritics with Dynamic Spelling

Published by | Thursday, June 7th, 2012

In this week’s InDesign Secrets episode, Anne-Marie Concepción reveals a secret for letting InDesign find the right diacritical marks for you, rather than having to track them down in the Glyphs panel (Type > Glyphs). If you select the words or phrases requiring diacritics and then change them to their language of origin, then you can get InDesign to supply the right marks via Dynamic Spelling.

For instance, let’s say I had the phrase in the figure below and wanted to add all the correct diacritics (one diaeresis, one cedilla, and one acute accent mark) to the French words in my sentence. First, I’d need to turn on Dynamic Spelling (Edit > Spelling > Dynamic Spelling), then select the text in question, set the dictionary to French rather than English, and then when I right-click on any word in my paragraph, I can choose the correct spelling with diacritics already applied. Note that because I’ve told InDesign to check the spelling of the second paragraph against the French dictionary, all the English words are marked as misspelled with the red squiggly underline. You can ignore that for the purposes of getting InDesign to give up the glyphs.

In the movie, Anne-Marie also has a tip for tricking InDesign when both the accented and unaccented versions of a word are technically correct.

Meanwhile, Anne-Marie’s partner in InDesign secrecy, David Blatner, has an exclusive movie for members of lynda.com this week on how to use a single celled table to apply custom formatting. If you want to see more table tricks in InDesign, you can check out Diane Burn’s entire course on InDesign tables.

David and Anne-Marie will be back in two weeks with more InDesign Secrets.

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS6 New Features
 InDesign CS6 Essential Training
InDesign Tables in Depth

InDesign Secrets: Uncovering hidden running headers and page numbers

Published by | Thursday, May 24th, 2012

In this week’s free InDesign Secrets episode, David Blatner considers the annoying mystery of covered-up master page items, like headers, footers, and page numbers. Sometimes, although you may have used a master page to apply these items to every page, there are occasions when your headers, footers, and page numbers may get stuck behind a particular graphic or text frame on random pages within your document. In these cases, even when you try to send the obscuring object to the back (via the Arrange command), your running header or page number is still mysteriously hidden, probably because it’s on a layer that’s lower in the stack than the one that houses the offending item.

The answer, as David reveals in the video below, is to place these items on a new layer that sits above everything else. It’s relatively easy to grab master page items (running headers, folio information, logos you want on every page, etc.) and move them to the topmost layer where nothing can bother them. I have to admit that, while my own Photoshop files are full of layers to the point of possible obsession, I often forget to use and/or troubleshoot layers when I’m working in InDesign. David’s tip is a good reminder of how productive a little layer troubleshooting can be. It’s easy to think of folios as the bottom of the z-axis, or the canvas on which your individual pages are created, but it helps to break outside that thinking.

Note: If you’re a member of lynda.com and you’re unsure about how to get started creating your first master page items, David offers some foundational training on how to use master pages and insert a running header that changes throughout your document in the Creating and applying master pages movie from chapter four of his InDesign CS6 Essential Training course. While this particular movie shows you how to work with master pages in InDesign CS6, the information also applies to earlier versions of InDesign as well. If you’re using an earlier version of InDesign and you want to be sure you’re seeing your own version of the interface in the movie, you can also find this movie in David’s earlier CS5, CS4, and CS3 InDesign Essential Training courses.

Meanwhile, David’s partner in InDesign secrecy, Anne-Marie Concepcion, has a new exclusive InDesign Secrets movie for lynda.com members this week that discusses five tricks for impressing your coworkers with your mastery of InDesign guides. As a freebie tip—don’t forget, guides can also be applied to master pages to achieve convenient, consistent alignment across all of your document pages. It’s all about synergy in secrecy this week!

Anne-Marie and David will be back in two weeks with two more InDesign secrets.

 

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS6 New Features
 InDesign CS6 Essential Training
• Creating Long Documents with InDesign

InDesign Secrets: Page numbering with numbered lists for greater flexibility

Published by | Thursday, April 26th, 2012

In this week’s free InDesign Secrets movie, David Blatner demonstrates how using InDesign’s ability to automatically number paragraphs can help you get around some of the limitations of the automatic page numbering feature. In David’s example, he shows you how to get right and left pages in each spread to have different page numbering schemes, with the addition of auto-updating sequential numbers, and an added A on the left page and a B on the right page, like this:

Spreads that show auto-updating sequential numbers in InDesign.

Unfortunately, InDesign’s page numbering feature doesn’t allow you to do this, but auto-numbered paragraphs can.

David starts by creating a page-number element on the master page, then he uses the Numbered List dialog box to set up the letter feature and indicate his preferences for the left (A) and right (B) page numbers. The video is scattered with mini-secrets along the way, including document navigation tips, a trick for stealthily opening the Numbered List dialog box, and a discussion on the intricacies of creating a numbered list that spans across unthreaded text frames.

Meanwhile, in the lynda.com library, David’s partner in InDesign secrecy, Anne-Marie Concepcion has an exclusive movie for members on how to use the InDesign CS5.5 Articles panel to set your story order, and why you would want to do it. Just look for movie number 036, Setting story order with the Articles panel, on the InDesign Secrets table of contents page.

Bonus secret of the week: Monday Adobe announced the release of Creative Suite 6, and members can check out Anne-Marie’s new course on InDesign CS6 New Features to get early insight into the latest program updates.

 

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS5 Essential Training
InDesign CS6 New Features
• InDesign Styles in Depth

InDesign Secrets: Importing a custom dictionary

Published by | Thursday, April 12th, 2012

In this week’s free InDesign Secrets video, Anne-Marie Concepcion shows you how to create and import a custom dictionary. Imagine you have a long document filled with specialized words (like Blatner and Concepcion, for instance), you have Dynamic Spelling turned on and you see the ubiquitous red squigglies telling you that you’ve got a whole host of misspelled words. You know they’re not misspelled, they’re just the proper names of your favorite InDesign secret-keepers, and you have no desire to have to tell InDesign that every instance of those names is perfectly OK in your book. The answer is a custom dictionary filled with the words you deem legitimate for your particular document.

The secret is to share a custom dictionary with InDesign. In the free video above, you’ll see how this breaks down into three easy steps:

1. Create your custom word list and save it as a text file.

2. Create a new dictionary based on that list in InDesign’s Preferences dialog box.

3. Import the list using Edit > User Dictionary.

The final step would look like this:

Importing a custom dictionary file into InDesign

Voila, all those red squigglies magically disappear with the power of this InDesign secret. (And, as a bonus, I’ll never accidentally write “Blanter” again.)

Meanwhile, Anne-Marie’s partner in secrecy, David Blatner (not Blanter) has an exclusive video this week for members of the lynda.com library called Changing document orientation and page size. In this movie David goes beyond the Document Setup feature—which just changes the orientation of your page—to explain how to change the orientation of your whole project, including altering the orientation of your page objects, one page at a time.

David and Anne-Marie will be back in two weeks with more InDesign secrets!

 

Interested in more?
• The entire InDesign Secrets bi-weekly series
• Courses by David Blatner and Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS5 Essential Training
Creating Long Documents with InDesign
• InDesign Styles in Depth
InDesign CS4: 10 Habits of Highly Effective Pros

InDesign Secrets: Viewing Photoshop layers in InDesign

Published by | Thursday, February 2nd, 2012

In this week’s InDesign Secrets episode, David Blatner reveals how you can leverage Photoshop layer features to provide more immediate flexibility in your InDesign layouts. Using layers in Photoshop is a great way to keep your options open, and the Layers Comp feature allows you to experiment quickly with different combinations of those options. In this free movie, David shows you how you can retain the flexibility of Photoshop layers even after you’ve placed the Photoshop document into your InDesign file.

For example, let’s say David wanted to retaliate for Anne-Marie Concepcion using an image of his head to demonstrate how to add images to a stroke in a previous InDesign Secrets video. He might decide to design the cover of a tell-all book that features a compromising photo of Anne-Marie. By placing a single Photoshop file in InDesign, he retains all three choices and could decide to:

a) give Anne-Marie a charming butterfly barrette created with a Photoshop shape layer:

Viewing Photoshop layers in InDesign example 1

b) Colorize Anne-Marie to a lovely shade of InDesign magenta via a Photoshop Hue/Saturation layer:

Viewing Photoshop layers in InDesign example 2

Or c) both:

Viewing Photoshop layers in InDesign example 3

Regardless, once the Photoshop file is placed, all of David’s revenge options can be accessed from within InDesign.

Over in the Online Training Library®, the forgiving Anne-Marie has another InDesign secret exclusively for members of lynda.com titled Adding custom HTML tags to EPUB/HTML export. In this video she discusses how the new InDesign CS5.5 feature that allows you to map your InDesign styles to CSS tags works. (Yet another reason to practice style-creation in InDesign!)

Anne-Marie and David will be back in two weeks with more InDesign Secrets. (And who knows what their revenge may be on me.)

Interested in more?
• All the InDesign Secrets on lynda.com
• Courses by David Blatner on lynda.com
• Courses by Anne-Marie Concepcion on lynda.com
• All lynda.com InDesign courses

Suggested courses to watch next:
• InDesign CS5 Essential Training
InDesign CS5.5 New Features
• InDesign Styles in Depth