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Technology Trends
The future of magazine publishing
is digital. In fact, the future is almost here. A 2003
survey of 268 Canadian magazines, conducted by Masthead,
reveals that nearly 80 per cent of these publications
had embraced computer-to-plate (CTP) technology, cutting
the need for film as they moved toward an all-digital
workflow. For art directors the shift means that an
increasing number of tasks once handled by dedicated
specialists are now devolving to their computer desktops.
“Over the last 10 years, typesetters have gone,”
says Georges Haroutiun, publisher and AD of Applied
Arts Magazine in Toronto. “Now ADs are doing more
and more things once handled by colour separators—everything
from doing some of their scans to bringing proofing
in-house.”
Whether or not this trend is desirable
is beside the point. Money and time savings—allowing
for later ad closings—will drive the evolution.
Of course, any seismic change to an industry is accompanied
by trauma.
The Proof Is the Problem
Magazines feel the pain most keenly
when it comes to conflicting standards, especially with
proofing and file formats. Masthead reports that 32
per cent of all submitted ad files don’t meet
publication standards, requiring a substantial investment
in labour to fix them—work that is rarely charged
back to the client. “A lot of people are giving
us laser proofs from improperly calibrated printers,”
says Maria Mendes, manager of print production at Transcontinental
Media in Toronto. “Or they give us RGB proofs
or no proofs at all. There’s no way we can match
a lot of these proofs on press. You need to have a good-quality
contract proof that has been certified to standards
set by Magazines Canada.” (See “Supply a
Proper Contract Proof” on p. 16.)
The Future Is Soft
While there is a strong industry push
to create universal standards for hard-copy proofs from
digital files, there’s also a major move to leap-frog
this stage altogether and go to “soft proofing.”
This is touted as a “paper-free workflow”
in which colour-accurate proofs can be viewed on calibrated
monitors. An image that an AD sees onscreen would have
two colour profiles attached to it: an input profile
(that takes into account the characteristics of the
specific image capture device, such as a digital camera)
and an output profile (that takes into account how it
will be printed, including type of press, stock and
printing inks). With the attached profiles, the process
of proofing layouts, even in remote locations, becomes
fast, easy and inexpensive, or so the argument goes.
That is the theory. In practice, however,
few Canadian publishers have yet adopted soft proofing,
despite the putative benefits. While most publishing
experts believe soft proofing is a great way to check
file content, they disagree on its viability for proofing
colour. “We don’t want ads submitted to
us with attached profiles, because there are no proper
standards right now. Everybody does their own thing
and we find it hard to control,” says John Hall,
vice-president, production at Rogers Publishing in Toronto.
Even so, there have been some major
moves to adopt soft proofing in the United States. TV
Guide, for example, is published with a soft proofing
process, speeding up its weekly turnarounds.
Key to the acceptance of soft proofing
is the emergence of high-quality, high-definition SWOP-certified
monitors, such as the Apple HD Cinema widescreen display
and the Sony Artisan. But even with such advanced monitors,
care must be taken to keep them properly calibrated.
“ADs have to keep in mind that no matter how good
a monitor is, as it ages it becomes more difficult,
if not impossible, to calibrate correctly,” says
Steve Manley, AD and president of Overleaf Design in
Toronto. “And I don’t know of any AD who
works in proper lighting conditions to view a balanced
monitor. Your overhead lighting, outside lighting and
even the colour of your walls will affect what you see
on-screen.”
The Changing Workflow
Dealing with layout applications,
with their separate font and graphics files, is one
of the banes of a prepress department’s existence.
Wouldn’t it be a lot easier to receive files in
a locked format, with essential elements embedded, in
a portable format that can be opened by almost any computer
system? These are some of the benefits of using the
PDF/X–1a format, the Magazines Canada standard
for ad submissions that is being adopted by an increasing
number of publications. A subset of the Adobe Portable
Document Format (PDF), the standard ensures that a graphic-arts
file reproduces on press the way the creator intended,
restricting the file to content that directly relates
to high-quality print production output. PDF/X-1a reduces
the potential for error by making sure that all fonts
and images are embedded, all graphics are encoded as
CMYK or spot colour, the file is identified as trapped
or not trapped and the type of output is specified.
Not Your Type
Embedded fonts in a fixed-file format
will go a long way to resolve some of the current type
issues, such as conflicting or corrupt fonts. ADs won’t
have to worry about having a different version of their
font used, causing reflow problems, or engaging in the
legally questionable practice of sending copies of their
fonts to the prepress house.
Another development designed to reduce
font headaches is the new OpenType cross-platform file
format developed jointly by Adobe and Microsoft. Not
only is the new format compatible with both Macintosh
and Windows computers, it uses a single font file for
all of its outline and metric data, simplifying file
management. It also has an expanded character set and
layout features, providing broader linguistic support
and more precise typographic control than current PostScript
fonts.
Get the Digital Picture
The adoption of digital images has
made enormous headway among magazines. While digital
images save time and scanning costs, they do present
some problems that are already making prepress professionals
nostalgic for the days of transparencies. Still, the
genie cannot be put back in the bottle. Publishers are
scrambling to establish guidelines for using digital
images, covering resolution, compression and formats
for supplied files. ADs are also learning through hard
experience that it is not enough to demand that photographers
turn in images of adequate resolution. Their digital
cameras need to have the same bells and whistles as
a traditional single-lens reflex camera, including high-quality
lenses.
Manley points out that magazines need
to rein in their enthusiasm for the cost-savings of
digital images. “Publishers are winning again
with all sorts of digital images that don’t require
colour separations,” he says. “They have
got to realize that not everything is a savings. If
they want to continue to have a quality product, they
will have to reinvest in top-notch scanning equipment
and the expertise to use it.”
Hall of Rogers Publishing agrees
with this sentiment. “Technology has changed
the responsibility for who does what,” he adds. “It
has thrown more and more on the creative side and
is cutting out the middleman.”
But as ADs are discovering, it is good to have the
expertise of the prepress “middleman” to
draw upon, to help them learn new tasks, to take over
critical
work, and to act as trusted guides in the quickly changing
digital landscape.
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