![]() If you want to view a document with all raster images grayed out (maybe to focus solely on type and graphics), but have placed vector graphics display, set up the Fast display raster slider to Gray Out, and change the vector slider to Proxy. Lastly, you can define the parameters for rasters, vectors, and transparency for each display level using the sliders. If you don’t check this box, re-opening a file with revert all individual object view settings back to the default. You can change the default view for all new documents going forward here, as well as force InDesign to preserve object-level display settings, even after closing a file. To customize the Display Performance settings, head over to InDesign’s preferences and select the Display Performance pane. The image on the left is set to proxy, the image on the right is set to high quality. If you know you’ve placed a high resolution image, seeing the jagged edges that proxy produces can be disconcerting. Though not as critical today, InDesign’s Display Performance still lets you decide how graphics will display, letting you set a happy balance between a sharp image and quick onscreen rendering of that image.īy default, InDesign is set to show images with a middle-of-the-road quality, using a screen resolution proxy, rather than a high-resolution image. When processors weren’t as robust as they are today, anything an application could do to conserve processing time was a boost to productivity. The culprit here almost always turns out to be InDesign’s Display Performance settings, or how images display onscreen. ![]() What am I doing wrong?”įear not, you’re not doing anything wrong. The question usually goes something like, “My images look really jaggedy onscreen, but print fine. One question I have been asked for years has to do with onscreen image quality. I love trying to figure out a good mystery, so I’m always up for the challenge. I spend a lot of time helping people troubleshoot their InDesign files.
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