If it's all vector then you can supply it to the printer as a pdf at any size, vectors can scale up to any size
If it's all vector then you can supply it to the printer as a pdf at any size, vectors can scale up to any size
Replace the feathered shadows or shapes with vectors. For example you can create a blend from the shadow color to white. The blend is a vector. Same thing with a Contour which is also a vector object.
Gary W. Priester
Mr. Moderator Emeritus Dude, Sir
gwpriester.com | eyetricks-3d-stereograms.com | eyeTricks on Facebook | eyeTricks on YouTube | eyeTricks on Instagram
The difference that you are experiencing colour wise between SVG & PDF is that SVG is RGB and PDF/X is in CMYK and this you have to deal with as your output from the printer will be colour managed by CMYK. Start with turning on "Simulate Printing Colours" from the Window Menu and down to Show Printer Colours, this is only an approx. of what your wet copy from the printers will look like but it is a start. As you have found out after exporting all of your feathering, transparencies and shadows are rendered as a bitmap because they are RGB effects and these effects when exported in a CMYK doc have to be dealt with therefore to show them in a PDF they become bitmaps. If this banner is for print dont use SVG as an export format stick with PDF and since you have AI on your hard drive you might want to do a bit more in Illy than in Xara, like your gradient background?
Like Mike I use both vector programmes in my work but mainly stick with Xara and have no trouble scaling banners and posters so long as you remember a few things:
1. Use layers
2. Always have the Text on the top most layer. You can change the text to shapes if you want as sometimes I's & L's go astray. I don't!
3. Remember there are other ways to do things as Gary has pointed out stay away from RGB effects. You can use them if you factor in your scale ratio to DPI.
4. Use Soft Groups
5. Talk to your printer or I should say, have a conversation with them. They are going to say the file must be this and that if you let me, you must ask can they print this at 100 DPI. and still be readable without too much pixelation.
6. Use all programmes to get the output that you want.
Design is thinking made visual.
Yes, it seems it is always needed to tweak in Illustrator...which by the way, I don't know what cosmic event made that piece of s...oftware the printers standard
Probably not as complicated as your file. A few types of transparencies and home-made drop shadows. There are also clipped regions, a few hundred or more elements, etc. The top line of text has a contour, but the others are "flat."
Hmm, why did AI become the so-called standard? One could postulate all sorts of reasons. Most likely many would be correct. It certainly was not due to its capabilities. I think its rise was like Excel or Word. AI became the norm in design circles proving that software does not need to be the best in class in order to sell more copies.
What Adobe did right, if anything, is to be an early bundler of related software and made sure educational systems had the suites for relatively little money.
Take care, Mike
This is the side and the back for the van wrap I was trying to export --not that complex really...seems I got it after all, but phew! what a work to make it into an .ai document! I wish all printers discover Xara soon It is way much better than Illy, i just compares as Xara being an Audi vs Illy being a 2105 Lada --no pun intended...as for the Lada, not for Illustrator!
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