Chapter 12. Applying Effects to Objects

IN THIS CHAPTER

  • Adding strokes and fills to frames

  • Applying and editing corner options

  • Applying formatting using the Eyedropper tool

  • Controlling object attributes

  • Using transparency, drop shadows, glows, feathering, and other lighting effects

InDesign has always been the leader when it comes to providing special effects, such as drop shadows and transparency, to layout elements, and accurately reproducing them in print. InDesign, in fact, has greatly blurred the role of a desktop publishing program, bringing in high-end graphics capabilities that had long been the province of image-manipulation programs such as Photoshop and illustration software such as Illustrator. The result is that you have the ability to create more visually rich documents than you can with any other program.

InDesign's effects fall into two broad categories:

  • Strokes

  • Lighting

The two types of effects are related in that they both interact with the edges of objects.

Strokes are the edges of all objects — frames, lines, and text — and InDesign lets you adjust their thickness, style, and color.

Lighting effects create a simulated three-dimensional appearance for objects, providing visual depth through drop shadows and embossing, for example. A related effect is transparency, which lets you control whether objects let elements below them show through, as well as enabling you to create interesting fade effects.

Note

Chapter 8 covers how to create and apply colors, gradients, and tints as ...

Get Adobe® InDesign® CS5 Bible now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.