Biker Scout
New Member
Agreed... customer supplied art gets rasterized, just as a rule of thumb. They have to proof and sign a small print of that as well.
Unless I create the file in a manner that I know that works with my RIP and color profiles. But 99% of the time I get web sized .jpegs and the client almost always wants a billboard out of it too...
And yes, from time to time, I'll export a file directly out of InDesign as a .jpeg, and just print it. But it has to be a real crap/rush job. Something designed at 1:1 and I take the file and just RIP it. But most of the time I try to adhere to the .eps file format. Even .pdf's don't print well on my RIP. Rasterize those just to be safe.
Unless I create the file in a manner that I know that works with my RIP and color profiles. But 99% of the time I get web sized .jpegs and the client almost always wants a billboard out of it too...

And yes, from time to time, I'll export a file directly out of InDesign as a .jpeg, and just print it. But it has to be a real crap/rush job. Something designed at 1:1 and I take the file and just RIP it. But most of the time I try to adhere to the .eps file format. Even .pdf's don't print well on my RIP. Rasterize those just to be safe.