Why are there white lines when I export from InDesign?

Why are there white lines when I export from InDesign?

When you export to Adobe PDF from InDesign, white or dark lines are visible in the PDF file. One or more of the following is true: White or dark lines appear in areas where process colors and spot colors interact during flattening.

How do I create a duplicate spread in InDesign?

In the Pages panel, do one of the following: Drag the page range numbers under a spread to the New Page button. The new spread appears at the end of the document. Select a page or spread, and then choose Duplicate Page or Duplicate Spread in the Pages panel menu. The new page or spread appears at the end of the document.

How to delete spreads and pages in Adobe InDesign?

Select one or more page icons in the Pages panel, and click the Delete icon. Select one or more page icons in the Pages panel, and then choose Delete Page(s) or Delete Spread(s) in the Pages panel menu.

How does InDesign redistribute pages between text frames?

InDesign preserves the threads between text frames. InDesign redistributes pages according to how the Allow Document Pages To Shuffle command is set. An object that spans multiple pages stays with the page on which the object’s bounding box covers the most area.

Why does InDesign make bitmaps look blocky?

Typical (Default): This setting makes bitmaps look a little blocky, particularly if you zoom in. The speed of zooming in and out is increased if you select this option. InDesign uses a preview that it created (or that was already imported with the file) to display the image on the screen.

Why are there dark lines in my acrobat photos?

Additional Information. White or dark lines can be caused by anti-aliasing of an application where the two regions intersect. Turning off the anti-aliasing in Acrobat’s display preferences (Smooth Line Art/Smooth Images) eliminates these lines.

How do I change the display quality in InDesign?

InDesign has three levels of display quality. To change this, choose Edit → Preferences → Display Performance (Windows) or InDesign → Preferences → Display Performance (Mac). Fast: optimizes performance, the entire image or graphic is grayed out. Typical (Default): This setting makes bitmaps look a little blocky, particularly if you zoom in.