Do you generally create the files using CMYK since it is a physical graphic instead of digitally design or do you prefer RBG???Corel X7
Made my own "Smallest File Size"
General - Selection, set by the selected objects, compatibility = Acrobat 9.0
Color = Use document color settings, output color as Native
Objects - Bitmap compression = ZIP, downsampling = 300/300/600, render complexas bitmaps, compress text and line art, export all text as curves
Prepress - none
98% of our prints are done in -house. Haven't had any outsourced pdf's rejected.
For vector objects CMYK is fine but for bitmaps always send RGB at ~1/4 the resolution you're printing.Do you generally create the files using CMYK since it is a physical graphic instead of digitally design or do you prefer RBG???
I try never to send a PDF, there's always a subtle but nasty color shift. I'll always try to send an RGB jpg with the rendering intent for bitmaps set to 'Perceptual'. A RIP will sort out RGB into CMYK far better than any other software you might have.Thank you so much.
For vector objects CMYK is fine but for bitmaps always send RGB at ~1/4 the resolution you're printing.
I try never to send a PDF, there's always a subtle but nasty color shift. I'll always try to send an RGB jpg with the rendering intent for bitmaps set to 'Perceptual'. A RIP will sort out RGB into CMYK far better than any other software you might have.
The image from an uncompressed or minimally compressed first generation JPG file is indistinguishable from that of a TIFF. A JPG file can suffer from the Xerox effect in that if one is opened then saved then bit for bit it will differ from the file that was opened. After many iterations of open/save the quality of the image can deteriorate. Bitmap images are sturdy and can withstand a lot of violence before the visual imaged is damaged to a point of being unusable.Oh come on! At least send an uncompressed TIFF! Sorry I like to rag on JPEG users.
I know and I really am just playing with you. It was ingrained in me early on that JPEGs are not print ready files even though pretty much every print in our showroom is a JPEG from the internet.The image from an uncompressed or minimally compressed first generation JPG file is indistinguishable from that of a TIFF. A JPG file can suffer from the Xerox effect in that if one is opened then saved then bit for bit it will differ from the file that was opened. After many iterations of open/save the quality of the image can deteriorate. Bitmap images are sturdy and can withstand a lot of violence before the visual imaged is damaged to a point of being unusable.
I figured you were jesting. Are there any other myths to which you cling?I know and I really am just playing with you. It was ingrained in me early on that JPEGs are not print ready files even though pretty much every print in our showroom is a JPEG from the internet.