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Heady304

: Imported image is much larger than it in the original Photoshop file My inDesign document has the exact same dimensions as my layered Photoshop one. In Photoshop, I hid all layers except background

@Heady304

Posted in: #AdobeIndesign

My inDesign document has the exact same dimensions as my layered Photoshop one. In Photoshop, I hid all layers except background and imported that, as a Photoshop file, into inDesign. No problem here. But then, still in Photoshop, I hid everything except a small image, I cropped the Photoshop doc to fit that image size, and imported the result, as a PNG image, into inDesign. Problem: the dimension of the image, which should obviously be smaller than the whole document, is now much larger.

Why does inDesign change its size? It didn't happen when I imported the whole PSD background.

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@Jennifer810

The problem has to do with a quirk in the png format, the way InDesign handles image sizes and a missing step in your workflow.

The size in pixels per inch of an image is determined by its metadata. A 1000x1000 pixel image can be 300 ppi or 72 ppi or even 2 ppi and it will still be the same 1000x1000 pixels in size. The only difference is the number hidden in the internal metatdata of the image. PNG, however, does not contain any ppi information (it also contains no color profile information, which can land you in trouble if you need color accuracy).

When you import an image, InDesign determines the size of the image (in inches or mm) based on the ppi number in its metadata. Since PNG has no such number, InDesign uses its default: 72 ppi. That means a 720 pixel image will be 10 inches wide if you place it by simply clicking the mouse where you want it to go. At 100 ppi, the image would be 7.2 inches wide, and so on.

This brings up the missing step in your workflow: don't just click. Click and drag to place an image. That way, you determine the size of the image on the page, not the metadata in the image.

Your PSD is probably 300 ppi or greater. Placed in InDesign, it will be sized based on the ppi information in the PSD: pixels/ppi = size. Your cropped PNG has no ppi metadata, so it will be sized using pixels/72 = whatever that happens to be.

In general, don't use PNG as an image format for print unless you know for certain that your document's RGB profile is sRGB and the original image was sRGB before you exported as a PNG. PNG was developed as an image format for the web specifically, so it didn't require a ppi number or a color profile.

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@Hamaas979

Check the Link Info (on the Links Panel) on the image you imported. Chances are the Actual PPI is the same, but the Effective PPI is different (smaller).

Because you are putting a smaller image into a bigger frame, it is stretching over a larger area. This will cause your Effective PPI to go down.

Try dragging the image into an area on the page that is not already a frame/object. It should import at the original, unstretched size.

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