I come across this all of the time. At risk of sounding condescending I'm wondering if and how other people are dealing with print files from the latest graphic designer culture. Is anyone getting GOOD technically sound mechanical art for grand or large format printing? Like with no missing links...fonts...stray points...nested clipping masks....wrecked compound paths...shitty embedded images, and generally kludged together sick duck files?
I've attached a series of images we could file under "same logo, right?"
If you are a prepress technician or even a one man show, are you a masochist like me and fixing this type of stuff?
Honestly, I was only marginally more particular before I learned cad. Loved Illustrator though. I think you have to love it to be any good at it. Being good at it should matter to you as a graphics/printing professional.
A drafting class will no doubt make you better at graphics. I scratched my head in the mid to late 90's when drafters hated graphics people and graphics people hated drafters......so I learned both.
If you see at the end of the series of pics, that was the difference in clean math. When you hide behind the width of strokes, and "effects" algorithms in drawing programs, it is only going to burn you later on down the road.
Like when you go to print it 10 feet wide...or change it's usage over a different background.
I come to this site to try to guide people away from this type of stuff. Or throwing up your hands and just rasterizing that crazy vector rat's nest.
When I started in print it wast still kind of a cool trade. You had to know your stuff...and you were ALWAYS trying to learn more and find efficiencies. These days all I see is people trying to re purpose web ads for something passable with nasty pixels and grain and blown out color. Or trying to get a google image search item for free to make money off of. I hate it, and try to force integrity at my own peril.
I admit that I can't fix every little nuance...but my prepress tech and I come pretty close. We take pride in our work. We take pride in paring down a ridiculous 3 gig Indesign package down to a 300 meg print file.
What can I say...it's a rant!
Andy in Seattle
I've attached a series of images we could file under "same logo, right?"
If you are a prepress technician or even a one man show, are you a masochist like me and fixing this type of stuff?
Honestly, I was only marginally more particular before I learned cad. Loved Illustrator though. I think you have to love it to be any good at it. Being good at it should matter to you as a graphics/printing professional.
A drafting class will no doubt make you better at graphics. I scratched my head in the mid to late 90's when drafters hated graphics people and graphics people hated drafters......so I learned both.
If you see at the end of the series of pics, that was the difference in clean math. When you hide behind the width of strokes, and "effects" algorithms in drawing programs, it is only going to burn you later on down the road.
Like when you go to print it 10 feet wide...or change it's usage over a different background.
I come to this site to try to guide people away from this type of stuff. Or throwing up your hands and just rasterizing that crazy vector rat's nest.
When I started in print it wast still kind of a cool trade. You had to know your stuff...and you were ALWAYS trying to learn more and find efficiencies. These days all I see is people trying to re purpose web ads for something passable with nasty pixels and grain and blown out color. Or trying to get a google image search item for free to make money off of. I hate it, and try to force integrity at my own peril.
I admit that I can't fix every little nuance...but my prepress tech and I come pretty close. We take pride in our work. We take pride in paring down a ridiculous 3 gig Indesign package down to a 300 meg print file.
What can I say...it's a rant!
Andy in Seattle