- Online: Extensions
- Acrobat
- After Effects
- InDesign
- Photoshop
- QuarkXPress
- 7 Favorite XTensions
- Barcoding Made Easy
- BigPicture
- CopyFlow Gold
- data2date
- Grabber XTensions
- ID2Q & Q2ID
- MadeToPrint
- One-trick Ponies
- OpenNow Pro
- Printer's Spreads
- ProBullets & Numbers
- Quark Interactive Designer
- ShadowCaster 3.3
- Sonar Bookends Pro
- Suitcase Fusion
- TeXTractor
- Tools of the Trades
- Universal Type Server
- Xcatalog Pro
- Xdata & InData
- XTensions for QXP 8
- QuarkXPress Server
- Online: Workflow
- Online: Applications
- Online: Automation
- Online: Education
If your workflow includes output, of just about any nature, you might be spending more time than necessary to manage devices, output styles, or output tracking. MadeToPrint, for either InDesign®, QuarkXPress®, or Quark Publishing System® is ideal for minimizing this resource sinkhole.
![]() |
|
| MadeToPrint (Auto) for QuarkXPress | MadeToPrint (Auto) for InDesign |
My first hands-on exposure to MadeToPrint came when I was called in as a consultant to a local newspaper. In their workflow, they manually generated a bitmap of each completed broadsheet with a unique name and sent the bitmap files to a print server for output. They knew that this process was time consuming, but they had not found a way out of the mire. With MadeToPrint, they were able to set up naming conventions for their pages and the XTensions module managed the entire process. While unique page naming is a great feature of MadeToPrint, it barely scratches the surface. Let's dig deeper into a feature set that includes:
- Single-page output that creates one file per document page
- Rules-based file naming
- Preflight check of documents
- Automatic update of links and activation of project specific fonts
- PDF production using Acrobat® Distiller®
- Output of layers and layer combinations
- Package commands as part of the MadeToPrint job
- Configurable Infobar (job slug) with dynamically generated content
- Extendable output options using PostScript® snippets and scripts
- Batch processing of folder structures containing files
- Optional hot-folder mechanism and connection to editorial systems
Starting up
MadeToPrint and MadeToPrint Auto are extensible technology. They require a core application as an engine. To those of you who regularly turn to extensions, this is a familiar concept, but to users making their first foray, adding extensions causes worry. Extensions — more formally known as XTensions® for QuarkXPress or QPS, or Plug-ins for InDesign — will either become a citizen of an existing menu within an application, appear as a new menu to an application's menu bar, or cause palettes or tools to be added to the application's interface. Once MadeToPrint is successfully installed, whether into QuarkXPress, QPS, or InDesign (though for this article, we'll focus on just QuarkXPress and InDesign), it is accessed from the file menu as shown in figures 1a and 1b.


Figure 1a and 1b MadeToPrint is prompted from the file menu of either InDesign (1a) or QuarkXPress (1b).
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16
If you enjoy our articles, click here to subscribe. |
||
| |
||
Free JavaScripts provided by The JavaScript Source |
||




