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Colin

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  1. 1 vote

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    Colin commented  · 

    This hasn't gotten much traction yet, but I can't be the only person with this issue. If you want to enable flexible color usage with a lot of different assets, the current Adobe Library implementation simply can't accomplish it. We don't have a great way to share icons that are editable across a large team.

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  2. 138 votes

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  3. 45 votes

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    Colin supported this idea  · 
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    Colin commented  · 

    I have some ideas to build on this type of thing here: https://indesign.uservoice.com/forums/601021-adobe-indesign-feature-requests/suggestions/49076855-change-asset-characteristics-color-style-color

    I'll also drop the feedback here since it is related to adding more functionality to Adobe Libraries:

    The Problem:
    When building out an icon system in Adobe Libraries, you need to save a separate icon for each color variation, style variation (we have a filled style, line style, and multi-color style), and color space (digital vs. print). For our organization, there are 3 styles, 3 color variations for each, and 2 color spaces, meaning you need 18 different versions of a single icon. For large icon libraries, this results in a massive library and poor performance (icons with too many assets start to slow down and cause crashes).

    My Idea for a Solution:
    Allow users to create specified color, style and color space variations for any library asset. In short, you could establish what colors are allowed for an asset that users could pick from and then drag into their projects.

    In our organization's example, we could pick a digital color space, select an icon from the line style, and then choose from an approved set of colors to drag into a project.

    From an interface perspective, we'd need to be mindful that users are likely going to be using a lot of icons in a single document, so having to make all of these selections for each icon would be cumbersome. Perhaps using filters to show all of the icons in a particular color space, style and color would be a shortcut so you could show the whole library in a consistent way at once.

    Another possible variable to introduce would be a safety space around an graphic asset like an icon. Right now, we're building in a non-filled, non-stroked box to add some space around our icons to help with consistent alignment and scale. This isn't handled consistently across Adobe products. Illustrator honors and includes that box, but InDesign ignores it. That's problematic when Libraries aren't consistent across programs.

    I know this type of thing also comes into play for brand identities with different logo color options, configurations, and color spaces, so this would affect a large percentage of users who rely on Adobe Libraries.

  4. 317 votes

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    Need More Info  ·  Anonymous responded

    Thanks for making this request. In order to understand the use-case more better I have a few questions:

    1. Whats the role of the different people working collaboratively on the same file. Are they always only designers or are other personas also involved.
    2. What is the use-case here, some parts of this request suggest an Editorial collaboration whereas others suggest collaboration amongst different designers. I am trying to separate these 2 requests out.
    3. What are the different kind of files (brochures, books, magazines etc) for which this is required.
    4. Does it need to be a web based service, or having the user be able to collaborate on one shared file using InDesign or InCopy on the Desktop will work? What is the advantage you feel over a web-service over the desktop app?
    5. How do you workaround this need today? What are the most important problems with…

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  5. 62 votes

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    Colin supported this idea  · 
  6. 5 votes

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    Colin supported this idea  · 

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