1 / 22

Introduction to Desktop Publishing

Introduction to Desktop Publishing. Using Adobe InDesign ® By Steve Sloan. Class Format. Presentation The “Zen” of desktop publishing What makes desktop publishing different from word processing? Hands-on Using InDesign, a simple exercise!. The program.

trygg
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to Desktop Publishing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Desktop Publishing Using Adobe InDesign® By Steve Sloan

  2. Class Format • Presentation • The “Zen” of desktop publishing • What makes desktop publishing different from word processing? • Hands-on • Using InDesign, a simple exercise!

  3. The program • This will be available for download • PDF(s), PowerPoint, Audio Version, Podcast • Temporary URL:www.edupodder.com/sessions • Sign Up Sheet • Please be sure you are signed up! • Handout(s) • Evaluation • Let us know how I did!

  4. Desktop Publishing (DTP) • The world of publishing was radically transformed in the 1980's by the introduction of desktop publishing

  5. Producing a publication involves many steps • Writing text • Editing text • Producing art (drawings, photos, etc.) • Designing the basic format

  6. The steps of production (cont.) • Typesetting text • Paste-up, arranging text and graphics on a page • Going to press, typesetting, shooting plates, printing the pages • Binding the pages into a finished publication

  7. With traditional publishing • This process was very labor intensive • It required a lot of equipment, trained people and time • It was hard and expensive

  8. DTP, going beyond word processing! • Very precise layout and design • Software focus is on the page • Done with tools that are small, economical and easy to use

  9. Typical DTP system • GUI computer(s) • DTP software (also called page layout software) • Laser or other high resolution printer(s) • Other peripherals (like digital camera)

  10. DTP Advantages • Saves money and time • Able to keep in-house and maintain quality control • Provides affordable publishing alternative for small batch jobs and non-mainstream periodicals

  11. DTP Software • DTP software is precise • DTP software aggregates! • QuarkXpress® is the market leader • Adobe InDesign is coming on strong • Adobe PageMaker® has been discontinued • Apple Macintosh® is predominate platform

  12. Precision and Aggregation • Content from other programs: • Text produced with word processors or text editors • Careful control of font usage • Charts and spreadsheets from spreadsheet and/or statistical analysis programs • Photos either produced digitally or scanned, often manipulated with programs like Adobe PhotoShop® • Half-toning and resolution issues • Color space considerations • Control that what appears in printed page is as close as possible to what appeared on the screen

  13. Precision and Aggregation (Continued) • Content from other programs (Cont.): • Maps, charts and other illustrations either produced in, or manipulated with, graphics or illustration programs like Adobe Illustrator® • Items need to be converted into formats the DTP software will import • Quality control

  14. Precision and Aggregation (Continued) • The page-layout process combines the various source documents together into a coherent, visually appealing publication • Uses own measurement system and printing trades language • Sample terms: serifs, leading, points, picas • In the printing trades DTP was once called “electronic pagination” • The “Zen” of desktop publishing:Digital preparation of pages for press quality

  15. Output methods • Print: • Laser printing • 600+ dpi, (mostly for small batch, in-house, flyers, newsletters, forms, black and white jobs) • Electronic pre-press • Professional service bureaus, 1200+ dpi, and large press runs for bigger jobs • Prepare “camera ready” output • Produce “color separations” (for color) • Version management and other work flow considerations

  16. Output methods (Continued) • Electronic Output • PDF® is the standard • Cross platform • Printable • Editable • Deployable on-line • Importable into DTP software • XML • eBooks

  17. This is an InDesign CS page

  18. InDesign is Palette Based • Tools Palette • Introduces own terms • One of many palettes • “Tiny arrows” indicate hidden tools • “Flyout” menus • Palettes dock and can be disconnected • Palettes are a strongly followed Adobe UI concept

  19. More about InDesign • Palettes can be torn off, grouped and joined • Uses flyout menus • Other great tools not mentioned • Layers, styles and tables • A lot of what you know about Pagemaker carries over to InDesign • Right clicking (ctrl-clicking) brings up important options

  20. I cannot teach you how to be an InDesign expert • Learning ID • User Group Meetings • http://www.indesignusergroup.com • You can’t be an expert without putting in the time! • Books • Deke McClelland (2004). Adobe InDesign CS One-on-one. Sebastapol: Deke Press/O’Reilly • Computer Based Training (CBT) • Total Training Series • Classes $$$$$

  21. InDesign References • The Book! • Kvern, O. M., & Blatner, D. (2004). Real World Indesign CS. Berkeley: Peachpit Press • Adobe web site • User to user forums • SF Bay Area IDUG • Meets bi-monthly

  22. InDesign Excercise • Please be sure you have handout • USE ID!!! • Using the tool the only way to learn it • It is like driving a car • I hope you enjoyed this session • Please don’t forget the comment pages

More Related