Skip to content

the-shoemaker

My feedback

1 result found

  1. 10 votes

    We're glad you're here

    Please sign in to leave feedback

    Signed in as (Sign out)

    We’ll send you updates on this idea

    How important is this to you?

    We're glad you're here

    Please sign in to leave feedback

    Signed in as (Sign out)

    The magic of InDesign’s effects all happens via Adobe’s transparency technology, which allows us to blend colors and detail from different objects. In order for it to all work there has to be a consistent color space for InDesign to use when it blends colors. This is called the Transparency Blend Space and it’s really important that you understand it in order to get the most out of InDesign’s effects. When we use transparency effects, InDesign compares different objects and combines their colors and detail. In order for objects to be blended, they have to be in the same color space. So when you apply transparency, InDesign converts everything on a spread to the Transparency Blend Space, regardless of whether that object is actually involved in the effect. And it’s important to note that when we say things are converted, we don’t mean that InDesign alters your placed files; they…

    An error occurred while saving the comment
    the-shoemaker commented  · 

    I was able to fix the issue by changing the color space of the images in photoshop from greyscale to rgb.

    I only had the issue when i had a color image and changed it to b/w in photoshop by changing the color spaces to greyscale and than removing the checkbox “embed color space” to keep it from reverting to colors in indesign.

Feedback and Knowledge Base