I have a rather large file in Illy that has alot of effects in it and a gradient background. All vector no raster images. This is where I start to get lost. Would it be better to scale it way down and then tell the rip to upsize it OR would it be better to build it at full size, flatten and rasterize?
In my newb mind I am thinking that the gradients may band bad from upsizing at the rip stage. Am I off base here?
Or what about exporting as a .tiff at full size? Cannot really afford to compromise quality with this one and naturally I confuse myself with this part.
Thanks in advance.
The problem that you have is the raster effects capability of Illustrator. The way you ask the question, you seem to think there is a problem with the raster effects in your RIP.
Would it be better to scale it way down and then tell the rip to upsize it
The only reason you would scale something down in Illustrator and then up-scale it in the RIP is because it is too large for Illustrator to handle it.
OR would it be better to build it at full size, flatten and rasterize?
If you can create it full size in Illustrator then there is no reason to flatten or rasterize it unless you are having transparency issues when printing. One of the only reasons I would ever rasterize anything in Illustrator is to try to eliminate transparency issues, for example, if you are getting boxes around JPGs that you may have in your Illustrator file then rasterizing it may get rid of that problem. Now, if you are getting undesirable results from Illustrator raster effects such as boxes around gradient effects or drop shadows then rasterizing may help that problem too. If the file is too large to rasterize then you would need to scale it down in order to rasterize it and up-scale it in the RIP.
In my newb mind I am thinking that the gradients may band bad from upsizing at the rip stage. Am I off base here?
I have never experienced any problems when up-scaling files in the RIP
Or what about exporting as a .tiff at full size?
I see no reason to attempt this, especially if you are working with large files.