Hi I am sorry to come this way but I have mislaid my user name and my log on details.
I have been using Scribus to produce an A5 64 (sometime 60 sometimes 68) page magazine once a month for the last couple of years. About half the pages are adverts in PNG format and the other half are individual pages of text with a few photographs. I now produce an PDF X3 format file which I send to the printer. I remove adverts when they do not renew, add new ones and the text is changed or deleted every month by going to the page and either editing it or clearing the contents and copying electronically from an original say press release. Sometimes I produce the editorial text in Word (so that I can spell check it) and then copy and paste in giving it my standard format. Some of the pages are of standard format each month with only changes of text. I have noticed that it seems very slow to load - it seems slower than when I started a couple of years ago. Should I be clearing down a buffer or equivalent - how do I make a fresh start without having to re-construct each page? Any guidance would be gratefully received. Kind regards Robin Dean On 20/12/2011 17:36, Robin Dean (Google) wrote: > Hi > > I asked my printer why I am getting muddy pictures in greyscale. Her > explanation is as follows (in italics): > > /one possible answer is because the images are originally RGB (or > greyscale), so if you use PDFX1 (or just plain PDF) then all images > get converted automatically to CMYK which makes then very muddy. This > is because an extra layer of black gets added to all images . The > preferred flavour is PDFx-3. This format keeps all colour modes in > their original form. //. / > > I have tried to export in PDFX-3 - the preflight verifier says that > the current profile is PDF/X-3 but when I move onto the Save as PDF > dialogue box all the Tabs are available EXCEPT the PDF/X-3 tab which > is greyed out. > > How do save in PDF/X-3 format? > > Kind regards > > > > Robin Dean -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.scribus.net/pipermail/scribus/attachments/20120328/7b641a39/attachment.html>
