Biggest problem we found was not being able to convert fonts to outline in PitStopThe Ghent Workgroup (www.gwg.org) is looking at publishing some recommendations in how to handle Canva files. Some of the members vendors have had issues reported to their support departments, and we think it would be of service to the industry to produce some guidance.
If anybody has any issues with Canva files (and has files they can share that we can analyse) can you PM me please, this would be of immense help.
One of our biggest problems is customers sending us artwork that is not properly set up for a bleed, not to size, etc., etc. etc. Canva has a check box that will download artwork with a bleed. (Hurrah) I email customers and tell them to click on the box for a bleed when they download the file. If you look at properties under Adobe Acrobat it will tell you if the file is from Canva. Years ago only business customers and graphic artists walked into a print shop, but these days anyone with an app sends us their files. Even our regular business customers now hire people who have no idea how to properly prep their files for printing. Any suggestions on how to handle this "new generation" of customers?Any one running into Canva files? We are seeing more and more customers ditching designers and creating content in Canva. We are experiencing fonts shifting, not to mention bleed and margin issues.
We’ve had some recent changeover in our company and previous owner often refused to request correct files from customers, unless I absolutely could not fix it regardless of time. One of these problematic customers hit me the other day, and I had sales request bleeds from the customer knowing there would no longer be internal pushback…and the customer delivered bleeds, and also some attitude in the email “you’ve never needed bleeds before.”I once emailed Canva to ask them to please make one simple change: allow the customer to export with bleeds and crops if they so desire (although why tf should they have that, they don't know what they're doing) OR allow them to export with the bleed but no crop marks. They ignored my email, no one got back to me at all. There's no way it can be a difficult thing to implement, they just don't know anything about commercial print shops and so their idea of what a print-ready file is bogus. They will only let you export a file with bleeds and crops, which are difficult to preflight and assess safety margins, or a file with no bleed at all. If I have to choose, I choose the former and manage, but if they want to cater their service to people for print projects, they need to make it so their exported files are not trash.
We’ve had some recent changeover in our company and previous owner often refused to request correct files from customers, unless I absolutely could not fix it regardless of time. One of these problematic customers hit me the other day, and I had sales request bleeds from the customer knowing there would no longer be internal pushback…and the customer delivered bleeds, and also some attitude in the email “you’ve never needed bleeds before.”
And they’re using Indesign so I feel like until we can get customers to reliably send print ready files from Adobe products, probably no hope with Canva….
I didn't realize they'd started printing as well. I see your point but don't agree with it. If they really wanted to force people into printing with them, they would only let you export with white margins for using a home printer or something and no crops. The fact that they're even letting people export with bleeds and crop marks means they want their files to be used in a commercial setting. They should go one tiny (so tiny!!) step further and set their customers up for success. Ultimately that's better for their company regardless of where their customers print.Canva wants the printing business, why would they make it easier to export out?
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