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Feine weiße Rahmen erscheinen erst im PDF

New Here ,
Jun 15, 2017 Jun 15, 2017

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Hallo und guten Abend,

ich bin Anfänger. Wie kommt es, dass ich in Indesgin keine Rahmen um Bilder die ich einfüge sehe,

aber später im PDF? Die Konturen der Bilder erscheinen quasi als Rahmen.

Bin für jede Hilfe dankbar, so kann ich den Flyer leider nicht drucken lassen.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 15, 2017 Jun 15, 2017

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Du gibst uns ja gar keine Informationen.

  1. OS?
  2. Version von ID?
  3. Welche Bilder, Dateiformate platzierst Du in InDesign?
  4. Welche Exporteinstellungen verwendest Du?

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New Here ,
Jun 15, 2017 Jun 15, 2017

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Hallo,

OS? Was ist damit gemeint.

Ich habe die aktuelle Version von ID

Als Dateiformat verwende ich jpg oder png, die ich zuvor in Gimp bearbeitet habe

Ausgabe.jpgAllgemein.jpgKompremierung.jpg

Reichen die Angaben?

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Community Expert ,
Jun 15, 2017 Jun 15, 2017

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Nein.

OS = Betriebssystem

Weshalb PNG? PNG kann kein Farbprofil.

Haben Deine Bilder Transparenzen?

Weshalb PDF/X-3? Wenn die Druckerei CMYK will, dann nimm X-1a, wenn die Druckerei Transparenz erlaubt, dann PDF/X-4. X-3 ist sogar von den eigenen Erfindern als Fehlgeburt bezeichnet worden.

Wenn es sich um transparenzreduzierte Bilder handelt, dann sind diese Linen wahrscheinlich Stitching-Linien. Wenn Du in Acrobat Pro – ich hoffe, das ist dein Betrachtungsprogramm – in den Voreinstellungen die Kantenglättung für Vektoren ausschaltest, verschwinden die. Die sind nicht druckrelevant und treten nur bei Transparenzreduzierung auf.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 15, 2017 Jun 15, 2017

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I don't read German, so it's hard for me to tell from your screen captures, but it looks like you are making your PDF compatible with version 4. This may well be the problem. You should choose at least Acrobat 5 or higher.

Other than that, make sure that the frame around the picture does not have a fill or stroke color.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 16, 2017 Jun 16, 2017

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Hi Barbara,

Willi gave the right hints.


There are printing services that "require" to send PDFs as PDF/X-3.
On the same note they say, that live transparency and RGB is not allowed.

That's ridiculous…


In effect that means: Use PDF/X-1a.

The "white lines" could be stitching artifacts if the OP used transparency reduction.
Or they are simply a non-fact and they stem from screen rendering settings that enable smoother vector lines in the viewing application.
If they go away after disabling smooth vector shapes they will not make it to the printed sheet.

So choosing Acrobat 5 or higher to allow transparency is no good idea.

The OP should send PDF/X-1a to the printing service if they do not allow transparency.
PDF/X-1a is a substandard of PDF/X-3. All what is allowed in PDF/X-1a is also allowed in PDF/X-3.

Regards,
Uwe

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Community Expert ,
Jun 16, 2017 Jun 16, 2017

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Thanks. I hope that uteu55209194 is able to solve the issue.

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