![]() ![]() If you’re copying and pasting embedded photographic images from Illustrator into InDesign (which I’m not quite sure why you would…but I’ll address that below), you are bringing all of the image data into InDesign. Vector art copied from Illustrator and pasted into InDesign becomes an InDesign object (or object), making it fully editable from within InDesign, and no longer linked in any way to the original Illustrator file. If you’re copying and pasting from Illustrator, you are effectively disassociating the graphics from their Illustrator origins. ie., will there be any loss in quality, resolution, colour-space, etc.” eps files (the photos are embedded, no links) into an InDesign file and would like to have a greater understanding of what effect this may have upon the image once it is pasted into the InDesign file. “I have a inherited a job where I need to cut and paste photographic images from existing Illustrator. While I’m getting my next (overdue) videocast finished, I’ve been answering a lot of questions by e-mail, so I thought I’d step out of my little corner of and contribute one of these answers to the blog.
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