0238 - Introduction to InDesign CC
Description
Course DetailsHave you ever seen a terrific-looking brochure or newsletter and wondered how it was made? Chances are the designer used Adobe InDesign CC, the industry-standard desktop publishing software now available through the Creative Cloud. In each lesson, you will learn an important aspect of InDesign CC and prepare a range of print and online products for a fictional company. You will get dozens of files to work with, including a partially completed InDesign document used to start each lesson. Then you will use the downloaded graphics, images, fonts, and other content to complete the project. To check your work or troubleshoot any problems you encounter, you will always get a copy of the finished InDesign project file. Lesson by lesson, you will discover how the program features relate to producing actual usable documents. You will explore the best ways to create different types of material, how to reuse items such as colors and artwork, and how to produce publications for different page sizes and devices. You will come away knowing how to use this popular page layout software to design and create professional-quality letterhead, business cards, brochures, forms, interactive PDF files, an eBook, and more.
How It WorksThis course is fully online, you require internet access and an email account. The course duration is 6 weeks, followed by a 2-week period to complete the final exam (online, open book). Lessons are released on Wednesdays and Fridays of each week, for a total of 12. You are not required to be online at any specific time. In addition to the specific lesson content, there is a discussion board with each lesson and often there is an optional assignment to apply the learning. Following each lesson, there is a short multiple choice quiz. Your score on these quizzes does not count towards the final mark but completing these helps solidify your learning as well as prepare you for the final exam. The final exam is an open-book, multiple choice exam and you need to achieve a minimum of 65% on the final exam to pass the course. There is only one opportunity to pass the exam. A certificate of completion from WatSPEED is available within four weeks of successful completion of each course and can be accessed in your student portal. Many of the Ed2Go courses are eligible towards the various online certificates offered by WatSPEED.
RequirementsHardware Requirements:
- This course can be taken on either a PC or Mac.
Software Requirements:
- PC: Windows 8 or later.
- Mac: macOS 10.7 or later.
- Browser: The latest version of Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox are preferred. Microsoft Edge and Safari are also compatible.
- Adobe InDesign CS6 (Windows), Adobe CS6 Design and Web Premium (Windows), Adobe CS6 Master Collection (Windows), InDesign CS6 (Mac), Adobe CS6 Design and Web Premium (Mac), Adobe CS6 Master Collection (Mac), or Adobe InDesign CC Student or Retail versions (Mac or Windows). Older versions of Adobe InDesign are also applicable, including all versions of Adobe InDesign CS5 and CS4 (not included in enrollment).
- Adobe Acrobat Reader.
- Software must be installed and fully operational before the course begins.
Other:
- Email capabilities and access to a personal email account.
Lesson 1 - Introduction to InDesign CC. Wouldn't it be
terrific if you could use one program to create all the different types of print materials you need for your
small business, organization, or family—such as letterhead, forms, and even brochures and business
cards? Well, you can! We'll spend this first lesson going over all the different types of content you can
produce with InDesign. We'll explore the InDesign workspace and tools, and then we'll get right to work
on our first project—a logo for the fictional business we'll create materials for throughout this
course!
Lesson 2 - Setting Up a New Document. In this lesson,
you'll learn all about starting and saving a new document. What's one of the most common types of
print documents? If you said, "letterhead," you'd be right and well on your way into this lesson's project.
By the end of the session, you'll know how to choose settings for a new file, add background images,
and organize your content to create a custom letterhead. You'll also add a second page to create a
matching envelope, and you'll learn how to add a custom Parent page for the envelope. As in all of our
lessons, we'll go over how to use the specific colors, styles, and logo for our fictional business, but you'll
be able to use the same techniques for your personal business or projects.
Lesson 3 - Organizing Objects on a Layout.
Organization is a key ingredient in successful work of any kind, and it's critical to successfully using
InDesign. In this lesson, you'll learn about organizing in two ways. First, you'll see how to use a
workflow, or an order of operations for creating an InDesign publication. Then, we'll go over how to
organize materials on a page and how to use many of InDesign's tools for aligning, organizing, and
laying out your content. In the process, we'll complete three projects: a sheet of address stickers, a
sheet of business cards, and a reusable business card template.
Lesson 4 - Setting Up a Multipage Document. Many of
your projects will use multiple pages with different layouts. Designing a travel brochure is the perfect
way to learn these skills, and that's what we'll focus on today. We'll work with two different column
layouts while exploring other InDesign features (like grids and document coordinates) that can help you
lay out a page evenly. We'll also go over using text frame placeholders so you don't have to add
content to the page to see its layout. For a final touch of realism, we'll use placeholder text during the
design process to give you a good idea of how a page will look when you're finished. You'll see how to
add a graphic into an existing frame and make it fit, as well as how to add content instantly using a file
called a snippet.
Lesson 5 - Creating a Tri-Fold Brochure. In this lesson,
you'll create another advertising piece for our fictional company: a tri-fold brochure. You'll learn how to
make Parent pages work for you. Another skill you'll take away from this lesson is creating guides to
accurately place the contents of the brochure. In addition, you'll learn how to add images to a brochure
and fit them to rectangular frames. You'll also learn how to save time by copying images. You'll be
using placeholder text in this lesson as well and work with paragraph styles. The end result is a tri-fold
brochure.
Lesson 6 - Creating a Book. The two key elements in
any print project are, of course, text and images. We went over text in our last lesson, so today, we'll
create a book. The finished book will have a table of contents and numbered pages. You'll create a
cover for the book and work with color. You'll import paragraph styles from another InDesign document
and learn how to fit content to a frame. Another useful skill you'll learn is wrapping text around images.
Some of the document text will be placed from a Microsoft Word document. The project will be exported
as a PDF to be used by a printing service to create multiple copies of the book.
Lesson 7 - Managing and Applying Color. Did you
know that your eyes can see over 16 million different colors? It's true! Fortunately, you don't have to
work with that many colors in InDesign. But if you ever find yourself trying to choose between
thousands and thousands of color possibilities, you'll understand why InDesign offers you so many
different ways to work with your choices. In this lesson, you'll learn the best methods for choosing,
naming, and organizing colors. You'll practice working with solid colors as well as gradients (which let
you display a range of colors within an object), and we'll round out the lesson by using some more
special effects in today's fun project—a greeting card.
Lesson 8 - Designing Tables and Creating Forms.
When you need to display bits of information in your publication and want to ensure it's easy to read, it's
time to use a table. InDesign offers you lots of tools for designing and formatting tables while helping
you make sure your content will coordinate with other documents. You'll see how this works today as
we practice building tables for an invoice. You'll also find out how to use color tints in your table, as well
as how to use styles to quickly and consistently reuse any of your layout features. Finally, we'll
experiment with an interactive PDF form. You'll add some fields to a blank form, see how to configure a
text field or button, and produce the PDF form.
Lesson 9 - Creating an Interactive Document. Creating
an interactive document, is a very useful skill to have in your tool kit, and that's what you'll learn how to
design in this lesson. The document you create will have an interactive menu, with buttons. When
clicked the buttons will transport the viewer to a specify destination. The menu will be a drop down
menu. You'll add actions to the buttons that show and hide then when the user interacts with them.
You'll also insert a video into the document. The finished project will be exported as an interactive
PDF.
Lesson 10 - Storing Text and Color Information.
Recycling doesn't just apply to items in your home or business. In this lesson, you'll see how to use the
3R's of recycling in InDesign to complete a newsletter project. As you recycle and modify colors and
styles from previous lessons to create new styles in your newsletter, you'll also reuse a lot of the tools
and skills you've used in previous lessons. Learning to effectively use all of InDesign's tools and
features in a variety of different ways on many different projects is what it's all about!
Lesson 11 - Creating EPUB documents and eBooks. In
this lesson, you'll work with text and images from Alice in Wonderland to build an EPUB. You'll learn a
lot about what does and doesn't work in an EPUB document, and work with best practices for producing
different types of EPUB documents. You'll learn how to create two types of eBooks, a book that will
reflow to the size of the device it is viewed on, and a book with a fixed layout, that is sized for a specific
device such as an iPad, or other tablet. You'll learn how to place images so they stay put when viewed
on a device.
Lesson 12 - Creating and Distributing a Complex
Document. Whether you're designing publications for business, hobbies, or social or community
activities, odds are you'll need to share them at some point. InDesign provides many options for
exporting and reusing a document, as well as printing. We'll review a few of them in this lesson as we
design a postcard using special fonts, colors, and image layout features. Have you ever seen text that
shows an image of some sort through the letters and wondered how it's done? You'll know after
completing the project in this lesson! By the time you finish this lesson, you'll know how to export a
publication as an image, print directly from your desktop, or create a compact PDF version of your
finished publication ready to email.