


Well, instead of converting, we recreate! Best practices, of course, demand a template. The point is, your clients want their designs to be fully on-brand, which means it’s important to maintain the exact colours used. If you’re a designer we don’t need to tell you why this is bad. The main reason for this, as we mentioned, is that the two suites – Adobe Creative Cloud and Microsoft Office – handle graphics in very different ways.įor example, many people forget that Microsoft Office uses RGB colour values and exporting an InDesign file to PDF retains the wrong colour profile (if the InDesign file was created in a CMYK colour scheme). One thing we’ve made sure to point out multiple times is that “direct” conversion (via PDF) produces average results at best.

In our last few posts we’ve discussed a common workflow issue faced by designers: converting InDesign files to editable Microsoft Office documents.
