Paperback
85 illustrations
176 pages
250 x 175 mm
ISBN 978 1 85669 421 6
$0.00
Published April 2005
Contents
Acknowledgements
Preface
1. The Evolution of an Industry
2. On the Press
3. A Word about Paper
4. Four-Colour Printing Explained
5. Understanding Colour
6. Getting the Most out of Your Monitor
7. Calibrating a Greyscale Image
8. Bitmaps and Pixel Depth
9. Calibrating Colour Images
10. Colour-Management Systems
11. Good and Bad Image Formats
12. Using Images from the Web
13. Scanning
14. Trapping
15. Using Pantone Colours
16. Photoshop Tips and More
17. Preparing the File for the Printer
Glossary
Index
Content List (PDF) Reviews Post Comments Books by the same author
Many graphic designers who have a degree or extensive training have little idea of the requirements of the printing process. Often afraid to admit it, every time they send a job to print they experience a period of nail-biting anxiety because they don't know how it's going to turn out. This book gives designers the confidence to do everything necessary to ensure trouble-free, high-quality printing - to calibrate images (colour and black and white), adjust trapping levels in all the major software applications, and mix colours that won't print as something that is a complete surprise. It explains scanning and resolution, and discusses good and bad image formats, describing techniques to make images look good in print, even if they have been downloaded from the internet. There is advice on how to get accurate quotes from a printer, and a checklist to use when sending a job to print.
Not available in the USA and Canada.
Mark Gatter has been a freelance designer sice the 1990s, prior to which he worked for 11 years in commercial printing. His clients include IBM, Lotus and LYW Archive Boston. He teaches software courses in Adobe Photoshop, Adobe PageMaker, Adobe InDesign, QuarkXpress and CorelDraw, as well as custom courses covering all aspects of digital repro and prepress.
Software Essentials for Graphic Designers: Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, QuarkXPress, Dreamweaver, Flash and Acrobat
A guide to the essential basics that professionals need on a day-to-day basis to run the seven major graphics and web-design software programs used the world over.
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