In article <5CA8AAB7-76A3-4312-AFEE-C17D04369CF3@microsoft.com>, Katriel wrote:
> Hi Steve and Macropod,
> Thanks for the advise. I created the file in Word 2007 using Save As PDF and
> chose the high resolution option. However, in Word I don't see the options
> that Steve mentioned for Power Point.
It doesn't sound like you're using the Office 2007 Save As PDF add-in. It doesn't
have a high resolution option. What software are you using to make PDFs?
> Under Word Options > Advanced > "When
> printing this document" I pnmly see "Print Postscript over text" and "Print
> only the data from a form". I don't see any options for grayscale.
No. That's a PowerPoint option. You asked about PowerPoint, not Word.
> Thanks
> again (and in advance) for your help.
> Katriel
>
> "Steve Rindsberg" wrote:
>
> > In article <BF9D2064-DB81-45AA-8CEF-57EF5C03FC51@microsoft.com>, Katriel wrote:
> > > I have converted a PowerPoint 2007 file to PDF, but it cannot be printed
> > > correctly on a commercial printer (digital printing). The printer reports
> > > that the PDF has "layers" which prevent him from changing some of the color
> > > pages to grayscale.
> > >
> > > How do I flatten the PDF once created? Or, is it possible to create the PDF
> > > without layers? Thanks,
> > > Katriel
> > > great sites for health care providers - www.gomdweb.com
> >
> > You don't mention HOW you created the PDF in the first place. That might help.
> >
> > If you're using the Office Publish as PDF/XPS add-in, try the following:
> >
> > In the Publish dialog box, choose Optimize for: Standard (publishing online
> > and printing)
> >
> > Click Options
> >
> > Put a check next to "ISO 19005-1 compliant..."
> >
> > Remove the check next to "Document structure tags ..."
> >
> > Make PDF again and see if that improves things.
> >
> >
> >
> >