I, myself, refer to my career as "graphic designer" not "sign designer" though that is the name of the place I work. A good graphic designer has to consider the end product in all facets. You are wrong if you think you can rasterize a file and "hide" any imperfections. Below is snipit of the ai file as given. What you see is only a small portion of the problems. Luckily all I needed for this sign was a rectangular decal applied to 10mm pvc. None of the outlines were converted nor were they set to scale with object. When I did set the outline to scale the corners were not set correctly (see other snipit). All of these flaws were somewhat easy to fix in corel but still time consuming just the same. btw I hate ai with a passion but it's a necessary evil in this industry.
If designs were done correctly from the get go we would all be in a better place!/QUOTE]
Well, this goes to one of my favorite rants, why any of us don't get art that is done correctly. It is not taught correctly, either the instructors don't know, or the line is "oh, just fix that in post production" I was not taught any of this stuff, I had to learn it myself.
The biggest problem with so many people, is the mindset "well, I've got the computer, I've got the software, I've got lots of fonts, so therefore, I must be a designer" That is why I get files that come in publisher and so many other programs that cannot produce professional output. Even with a professional designer, which I am one, many times you get a logo file done in Illustrator with a stroke on the logo, the logo is drawn to about a 10 inches square, let's say, but they use a 1 point stroke, now reduce that down to a 1 inch logo, that .1 point stroke is gone.
I've done stupid things, sure, we all have, but a lot of this is the fault of the system. Young kids are learning how to use Illustrator, with no training or understanding of how to make it work in the real world, and their instructors, when they get to college, may only have a slightly better clue.
Many years ago, I worked at a local place. They called me in on a day of vacation to tell me my job was eliminated after 11 years. While it was partially because I was decently paid, it was also political. I kept up with my friends there, and when they hired a new person, the company always posted a note about the new hire. The person who ultimately came into that position a few years later came with so much praise of their computer and print skills, so I was told.
His abilities apparently were not anywhere near professional level, the stuff he sent to a local printer, who knew me, said so much of it was wrong, it was not even funny.
No matter how professional they supposedly are, it depends on who fixes their mistakes, and if they actually learn from it, or not.
Ken