I got almost all of my software and print production training in the early 90s at a vocational training establishment. After a couple of years of practical work experience, including time in a print-shop where I learned how to burn plates, strip negs, and shoot camera ready art, I went on to art school where the party line was (and still is) "We teach design, not software", which I get - I mean they're educating creatives: designers and art directors. So a lot of the young designers I graduated with had no idea what separations, trapping, or color profiles were all about. What I also found were a lot of very talented older designers who hadn't kept up with technology or software enough to translate their design processes into updated, workable art files. While I am usually hired as a graphic designer or production artist, my career has really been built on my technical and software skills. After more than a couple of decades in this business, I'm now at an agency where most of what I do is look at files and make sure they are print-ready. When there are issues, I really make an effort to educate the designers and teach them how to correctly use the software and create clean files for print, although some days it's almost like giving a history lesson.
But I have a question: I'm assigned to the creative department, which makes sense since I deal with the art files and the designers. However, the persons who get the bids, do the purchasing, and determine the print specs are the ones that communicate directly with the vendors about file set up, then they pass the information on to the designer, who then creates the art and hands it over to me to make sure the file is clean). I've always worked hard to have good working relationships with every vendor's pre-press department, and I've learned a lot from them over the years so it's really weird for me to have to go through a couple of layers of communication to get art set up right. There are rounds and rounds of test files, and back and forth from me to our "production" department, from them to the vendor, then back again. Is this normal practice? Do pre-press departments prefer this kind of workflow? It seems kind of weird that the purchasing dept. does the press checks, not the creatives. Or maybe I'm just being old-school about things...