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Save your publication as a page-independent PostScript file for commercial printing
When you use the Pack and Go Wizard to pack your publication and related files to take to a commercial printing service, Microsoft Office Publisher creates a Zip file and a PDF (PDF: Portable Document Format. A PostScript-based electronic file type. You can save most documents as PDF files and share them with other users on any computer.) file for your commercial printer. Discuss with your commercial printer if these are the files that they need you to deliver. If these are not the types of files that they work with, your commercial printer may ask you to produce a PostScript (PostScript: A page description language used by printers and imagesetters.) file. Note You can save as a PDF or XPS file from a 2007 Microsoft Office system program only after you install an add-in. For more information, see Enable support for other file formats, such as PDF and XPS. A commercial printing service may ask you for a PostScript file for any of several reasons: - They might not accept Publisher files.
- They might not work with PDF files.
- They might use only Macintosh computers.
- As part of their prepress process, the commercial printing service may use a trapping or page-imposition program that requires using page-independent PostScript files that contain font-download information for every page of a multipage publication.
The pages in a page-independent PostScript file can be rearranged or printed selectively by a third-party program without affecting how the other pages of the PostScript file print. PostScript files can be printed only on a PostScript printer and you cannot make changes to a PostScript file after you have saved it. Important Consult with your commercial printing service to determine if you need to save your publication as a page-independent PostScript file and whether to save it as a color-separated file or as a composite file. What do you want to do?
Save as a color-separated PostScript file
- On the File menu, click Save As.
- In the File name box, type a name for the file. You don't need to type a file name extension. Publisher automatically adds .ps to the end of the file name you type.
- In the Save as type
list, select PostScript.
- Click Save.
- In the Printer name list, select the PostScript printer or imagesetter (imagesetter: A high resolution output device that prints to paper or film, or directly to a press plate. Publications that will be commercially printed are usually output from an imagesetter as the first step toward going to press.) that you want. If necessary, install a PostScript printer.
How? Consult your commercial printing service about which PostScript printer you should install and where you should install it from.
- On the
Start menu in Microsoft Windows XP, click
Printers and Faxes.
- Under Printer Tasks, click Add a Printer.
- Follow the instructions in the
Add Printer Wizard.
- Click Properties, and then click the Advanced tab.
- Under
printer name Advanced
Document Settings, expand
Document Options, and then expand
PostScript Options.
- In the PostScript Output Option list, select Optimize for Portability.
- Click OK.
- On the Printer Details tab, click Advanced Printer Setup, and then click the Separations tab.
- In the Print colors as list, click Separations.
- In the These plates list, do one of the following:
- Click All defined inks to print a spot-color or process-color plate for every ink you have defined in the publication (Tools menu, Commercial Printing Tools submenu, Color Printing command).
- Click Used inks only to print a spot-color or process-color plate for every defined ink that is used in the publications.
- Click Convert spot to process to print only process-color plates and convert all defined spot colors to process colors.
- To set other print options that your printing service recommends, click the options you want on the Page Settings tab and the Graphics and Fonts tab, and then click OK.
- Click Save.
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Save as a composite PostScript file- On the File menu, click Save As.
- In the File name box, type a name for the file. You don't need to type a file name extension — Publisher automatically adds .ps to the end of the file name you type.
- In the Save as type
list, select PostScript.
- Click Save.
- In the Printer name list, select the PostScript printer or imagesetter (imagesetter: A high resolution output device that prints to paper or film, or directly to a press plate. Publications that will be commercially printed are usually output from an imagesetter as the first step toward going to press.) that you want. If necessary, install a PostScript printer.
How? Consult your commercial printing service about which PostScript printer you should install and where you should install it from.
- On the
Start menu in Microsoft Windows XP, click
Printers and Faxes.
- Under Printer Tasks, click Add a Printer.
- Follow the instructions in the
Add Printer Wizard.
- Click Properties, and then click Advanced.
- Under
printer name Advanced
Document Settings, expand
Document Options, and then expand
PostScript Options.
- In the PostScript Output Option list, select Optimize for Portability.
- Click OK.
- On the Printer Details tab, click Advanced Printer Setup, and then click the Separations tab.
- In the Print colors as list, do one of the following:
Note To save a composite CMYK or RGB (RGB: A system that describes colors as a mixture of red (R), green (G), and blue (B). The color is defined as a set of three values (R,G,B). Using 0 (zero) percent of each color produces black; using 100 percent of all three colors produces white.) PostScript file, you must have a color PostScript printer selected. - To set other print options that your printing service recommends, click the options that you want on the Page Settings tab and the Graphics and Fonts tab, and then click OK.
- Click Save.
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