Postflight, preflight video using the preflight feature in Acrobat PDF
Let’s just get right to the educational feature film and then below some all important postflight, pardon the pun, commentary. Here is the nicely prepared tutorial titled, “Analyzing and Preflighting Adobe Acrobat PDF Files For Print“:
Great job by http://www.envisionprinting.com/ in highlighting these technical prepress issues and how to tackle finding them in Adobe Acrobat. OK, but did you notice that most of the items he was checking for, are best checked and corrected well before the PDF stage? The main issues were:
* Non embedded Fonts (missing fonts in native file)
* RGB images instead of CMYK
* Low Resolution Images
These common issues and more would have to be fixed by the graphic designer, back within their native files*. Yes, it is utterly important to check the Acrobat PDF you have created, however, by first preflighting and then creating a PDF, you will be ahead of the game. Not only that, but tools like FlightCheck Professional will not only check Adobe InDesign, Illustrator, QuarkXPress, etc, but also the resulting PDF through one VERY easy to use drag-and-drop interface. Furthermore, you can also package all fonts and images together for archiving or compressing and sending to someone else the full job; it will even preflight Adobe Acrobat, check a PDF and collect non-embedded fonts used but not placed within a PDF!
Try FlightCheck Professional demo today and see just how much productivity it will help you achieve!











December 1st, 2009
Social comments and analytics for this post…
This post was mentioned on Twitter by Markzware: Postflight, preflighting video using the preflight feature in Acrobat PDF: A postflight check on a PDF is needed, b… http://bit.ly/5dsDbC…