The limitation is in the Adobe PDF display software you are probably using. There is a certain size of layout that Adobe products won't display (204" is definitely up there) even though the PDF is a valid one. Other PDF viewers such as Foxit (Free reader) will likely display your PDF just fine.
I've encountered this many times when trying to produce a proof of a long banner. You'll just have to make a copy of your layout on a new page at reduced size (1/2 scale, for instance) and make your PDF from that.
Yes, I believe the size limit for PDF's is 200" x 200". Have to scale down as suggested.
Is this a Corel limit? Or PDFs in general?
The printer is asking for full size
I agree. Seems like many budget printers don't want to do that.Not really a limit with PDFs in general and obviously not with Corel -- it's an Adobe display limit. Corel can produce PDFs over this size that other viewers have no problems with (such as Foxit, as mentioned).
Regardless, most printers worth their salt should be able to process a file given at half-scale (50%), print at 200%, for a final size of 100%
I had a similar issue doing a 40 foot banner. I was told to shrink it proportionally in a pdf, the reopen in Photoshop. Resize it and save it as a jpeg.I'm trying to export a file to PDF and am having issues. The file is 204" wide, so I don't know if that's part of the issue. The PDF just keeps coming up blank. I've even tried converting the entire image to bitmap, with the same results.
Any thoughts?
Is this a Corel limit? Or PDFs in general?
Not really a limit with PDFs in general and obviously not with Corel -- it's an Adobe display limit. Corel can produce PDFs over this size that other viewers have no problems with (such as Foxit, as mentioned).
It's not an Adobe display limit. Corel is broken.
The PDF spec allows a maximum of 14,400 x 14,400 generic units, which by default are equal to 1 point, so that's effectively 200"x200". Corel saves a 204"x204" PDF, for example, as 14,688 x 14,688 units, disregarding the limit.
If standards aren't followed, we get compatibility problems. That's why standards exist, and PDF is an ISO standard. Corel is the problem here, not Adobe.
I would not say Corel is 'broken' if it allows a size larger than Adobe is currently willing to support. After all, other PDF viewers (as already mentioned) and editors allow the same transgression of the size limits that Adobe holds to.
Adobe effectively gave up control of the PDF 'standard' when they published the specs for it. As the graphics industry pushes the spec to better suit itself, Adobe is making a mistake in not adjusting along with the rest of the industry. (IMO)
So, no... Corel (or any other application supporting 'oversize' PDFs) is not 'broken' by any stretch -- I just see it that Adobe is lagging and that we have to sometimes work around that. If Adobe is smart and listening to their users, they will eventually get around to addressing this rather than stubbornly holding to their precious spec.
Sorry, but I don't think this is worth arguing if you don't understand why breaking standards is bad practice and counterproductive. PDF standards do allow for documents over 200 inches, by changing the generic units to something other than 1 point. The real limit is 15,000,000 inches, and Acrobat can display a 15,000,000 inch PDF file just fine.
Neither Coreldraw nor Illustrator have implemented support for this yet, and I don't really see that as a problem as it's normal for software to lag behind the latest standards. It is a problem that Corel uses a hack to break the limit, and it's especially problematic that they don't warn users about it.