On the cover of my brochure I'm using an image I've imported from Photoshop as a .tif with layers and transparency (CMYK, 300 dpi). The actual tif file consists of only one layer, with the background cut out of it.
When placed on top of a dark background in Indesign, I can see the rectangle edge of the photo because it's changed the background color to be darker. I should also mention that I don't see any of this darkening until I print, as it doesn't show up in the actual computer file or if I export to a .pdf and view it in Acrobat.
If I stretch the image's rectangle frame to go off the edge of the page, then I can't see the edge anymore, so I suppose it's darkening the entire page evenly.
This of course is a quick fix, but I'd rather figure out why it's happening in the first place. Any thoughts?
P.S. I don't see this happening on the pages with lighter backgrounds, perhaps because the change is too slight. I'm worried that if I print it offset that I'll see it only too late.
When placed on top of a dark background in Indesign, I can see the rectangle edge of the photo because it's changed the background color to be darker. I should also mention that I don't see any of this darkening until I print, as it doesn't show up in the actual computer file or if I export to a .pdf and view it in Acrobat.
If I stretch the image's rectangle frame to go off the edge of the page, then I can't see the edge anymore, so I suppose it's darkening the entire page evenly.
This of course is a quick fix, but I'd rather figure out why it's happening in the first place. Any thoughts?
P.S. I don't see this happening on the pages with lighter backgrounds, perhaps because the change is too slight. I'm worried that if I print it offset that I'll see it only too late.