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Kristi927

: Rendering issues when printing PDF file with transparency on images I've created a document using OpenOffice / LibreOffce with a black background and PNG images which have some transparency. I

@Kristi927

Posted in: #Images #Pdf #Png #PrintDesign #Transparency

I've created a document using OpenOffice / LibreOffce with a black background and PNG images which have some transparency. I exported that document to PDF and printed it. The black which comes from the background looks matte whereas the black which comes from the images looks glossy.

Q: How can I make sure my entire document will render the same once printed?

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@Courtney577

I solved the same problem by setting an image as background. Just create a plain image of the color you want for the background, then go to Edit > Page > Background and select "Image" instead of "Color", select the color image and your background is ready.

Hope it helps, good luck

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@Sims5801359

Could also be that your printer's colour management handles blocks of colour differently from images, and therefore, although they are the exact same colour value in the file, the background is being printed as a richer black.

I've seen this on colour laser printers which are set to optimised for presentation printing. Try turning any colour management settings off on the printer.

If you can't, you could try using an image for the background too. I've had to do this for posters to be printed on a client's own desktop colour printers.

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@Hamm6457569

I can't give you specific guidance with regard to Libre Office, but I can tell you what the problem most likely is: your background is a simple black, where your PNG blacks are RGB Black. You'd think, intuitively, that these would be the same, but they're not. Black in RGB is what is termed a "Rich Black" or "Built Black" and actually consists of Black plus Cyan, Magenta and Yellow. Straight black is actually a very dark gray; it needs the other colors to absorb more light and become "more black."

Look in Libre Office for a setting that makes your entire document RGB, or a color that is Rich Black, and see if that helps. It might work to build your background using cyan, magenta and black objects one on top of another, but without knowing how Libre Office handles such things, I couldn't guarantee the result.

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