Hi Richard,

Let me add a few remarks.

> It's absolutely a Scribus success story, and I've documented it here:
> 
>    
> http://wiki.scribus.net/canvas/Success_stories#The_World_Naked_Bike_Ride_Book_.28160_pages_and_250_full_colour_photographs.29

Given a discussion we had on this list a few years ago, a discussion centered 
around a tutorial that involved images of ancient Indian statues that displayed 
(horror of horrors) bare female breasts, i.e., one of the most natural 
characteristics shared by all female mammals on earth, I wonder if we have to 
add an "X-Rated" warning to the wiki front page now ;)

On a more serious note, looking at the picture of the book, I noticed that you 
didn't apply hyphenation to your text frames, which leaves some ugly holes in 
the text -- something to consider for the next edition.

> LSI accepted the exported PDF/X-1a without complaint, all colours are
> printed
> fine, on the full colour cover, as well as throughout the entire book
> which
> includes 250 photographs, logos, posters and images. For more details of
> the
> actual process, you can about the entire process here:
> 
>     http://www.naktiv.net/books/wnbr/publishing.html
> 

Since you're using OpenSUSE, you don't have to download the profiles from 
Adobe's or anyone else's website, as collections of all relevant ICC profiles 
are available for download and/or 1-click install via OpenSUSE's website (and 
not just for Novell/SUSE or OpenSUSE, but other distros as well).

"In both cases, the resulting PDF will probably appear dark and contrasty, this 
seems to be a feature of PDF/X-1a:2011."

Not really. You need to adjust your monitor settings, activate colour 
management and also activate print emulation on screen (as described in the 
Online Manual) to have a more realistic preview of the print result.

Finally, thanks for mentioning pdf-preflight. This looks very interesting. 
Maybe we can find someone (GSoC 2013?) to integrate the library, or parts of 
it, because pre-flight profiles (and most certainly PDF/X profiles) are 
becoming increasingly important in the printing industry. InDesign already 
supports preflight profiles, afaik.


Cheers,

Christoph

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