![]() I'm not sure I understand the reasoning behind your quote. It'd be nice to know exactly what you meant: are you going to be making training presentations that get packaged as PDFs? Are you planning on exporting. Stix' suggestion to grab some stock files and pull 'em apart is a good one.Īlso: InDesign has mostly been a print design app for most of its existence, and the presentation-related tools are kind of new, and therefore you won't find as much about them online as you will about specifically print-related stuff. Honestly, probably your best bet is to a) spend some time looking at the posts here, and on places like, and b) trying stuff in a DIY fashion and asking about it here. Similarly, although layers do exist in InDesign, but they don't work the same way as they do in PS, and you use them for very different purposes. (But doing so is optional with placed text content.) Did you already know this? Because I know very little about PS, but I do know that its import-graphics functionality doesn't operate the same way as does InDesign. In fact, you don't "import" graphics into ID at all, you place files, and the content remains outside of InDesign, and you need to maintain the relationship in the file heirarchy between the INDD and the graphics file which you placed into it. In fact, it'll be to your detriment at first. That being said, you'll find that InDesign has a very different toolset and a lot of your Photoshop knowledge will not be portable. ![]() ![]() I wish they were all subtitled so I could watch 'em at 3x speed. I'm with you on hating Lynda, but I generally hate tutorial videos in general unless I'm a complete noob. ![]()
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