Pat Whatley
New Member
I'm doing artwork for sponsor t-shirts, the kind of shirt with the event logo on the front and 50 different sponsor logos on the back. I was provided logos in everything from web capture jpg files to vector art.
I was setting the logos up for the website so I did them all in photoshop at 8" x 8" at 300 dpi.
When I got asked to do the t-shirt artwork for the back of the shirt I placed those logos into a 24" wide x 36" tall file at 300dpi. The edges on the logos is great, no pixelization and no half-tones (the dang file is massive) Sent it all to the t-shirt printer assuming they were just going to scale the file down and output a film positive.
Well now they're insisting on vector art for everything. I've never dealt with putting all these logos on a shirt.....I don't do shirts. I'm just not understanding what the need is for vector art. Is that standard for something like this? Is screenprinting still that dated?
They have a pretty large shirt printer who is going to print the shirts, market the shirts, and sell the shirts for the festival people. The festival people will make $5 per shirt with no risk of being stuck with unsold t-shirts and no effort so they are insisting on using this printer.
I was setting the logos up for the website so I did them all in photoshop at 8" x 8" at 300 dpi.
When I got asked to do the t-shirt artwork for the back of the shirt I placed those logos into a 24" wide x 36" tall file at 300dpi. The edges on the logos is great, no pixelization and no half-tones (the dang file is massive) Sent it all to the t-shirt printer assuming they were just going to scale the file down and output a film positive.
Well now they're insisting on vector art for everything. I've never dealt with putting all these logos on a shirt.....I don't do shirts. I'm just not understanding what the need is for vector art. Is that standard for something like this? Is screenprinting still that dated?
They have a pretty large shirt printer who is going to print the shirts, market the shirts, and sell the shirts for the festival people. The festival people will make $5 per shirt with no risk of being stuck with unsold t-shirts and no effort so they are insisting on using this printer.