Chapter 21: color separations, Preparing to print separations, Creating separations – Adobe InDesign CS3 User Manual
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Chapter 21: Color separations
To produce high-quality separations, it helps to be familiar with the basics of printing, including line screens,
resolution, process colors, and spot colors. If a print service provider is producing your separations, work closely with
them before beginning each job.
Preparing to print separations
Creating separations
To reproduce color and continuous-tone images, printers usually separate artwork into four plates—one plate for
each of the cyan (C), yellow (Y), magenta (M), and black (K) portions of the image. When inked with the appropriate
color and printed in register with one another, these colors combine to reproduce the original artwork. The process
of dividing the image into two or more colors is called color separating, and the films from which the plates are
created are called the separations.
Composite (left) and separations (right)
Separation workflows
Adobe InDesign CS3 supports two common PostScript workflows; the main difference is where separations are
created—at the host computer (the system using InDesign and the printer driver), or at the output device’s RIP (raster
image processor). Another alternative is a PDF workflow.
Host-based separations
In the traditional host-based, preseparated workflow, InDesign creates PostScript infor-
mation for each of the separations required for the document, and sends that information to the output device.
In-RIP separations
In the newer RIP-based workflow, a new generation of PostScript RIPs performs color separa-
tions, trapping, and even color management at the RIP, leaving the host computer free to perform other tasks. This
approach takes less time for InDesign to generate the file, and minimizes the amount of data transmitted for any
given print job. For example, instead of sending PostScript information for four or more pages to print host-based
color separations, InDesign sends the PostScript information for a single composite PostScript file for processing in
the RIP.
For a video on preparing files for output, see
. To view a printing guide for prepress
providers (PDF), see
.