- Are your customers using another DTP application than you do?
- How do you exchange documents?
- And what about the colors on the printouts?
With PDF Handshake there are no more application incompatibilities. Here is an example of how you can get high-quality printouts of a document that has originally been created with Microsoft Word 5.1 and then transformed into PDF.
The example production environment is illustrated in Fig.
52.
Fig. 52: Example environment
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The corresponding workflow is described below:
- Create a complete document using Microsoft Word 5.1. Import graphics (e.g. FreeHand EPSF graphics) and images (e.g. PICT Photoshop images), if desired.
- Set up your printer driver as shown in Fig. 53 below and print your document into a PostScript file.
Fig. 53: Printing the Word document into a PostScript file
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Start the "pdfprint" program on your server or install our Acrobat plug-in on a Macintosh client and open the PDF Handshake print dialog in your Exchange or Reader application (compare Fig.
54).
Fig. 54: Printing with PDF Handshake Print
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- Set up all required parameters and print the PDF document you have received. Note that for best color matching results, it might be helpful to get ICC profiles from company A. For example, if the document contains several FreeHand illustrations, the RGB profile of the designer's monitor would guarantee the best results. However, it is also possible to use the standard profiles we deliver with PDF Handshake.
Company A:
More
opportunities
1. The application on the input side is exchangeable. Microsoft Word is
only one option.
2. In case both of you companies are using EtherShare 2.6 and have PDF Handshake installed, you can both make use of the more than hundred fonts we deliver.
Your printers will have the same fonts available on the server. So you do not have to include them in your PostScript job (you may set
Font inclusion in your printer driver to
None), and you do not have to embed them when distilling the file, either. The exchanged files will become smaller.