hkellogg
Well-known member
As a faculty member at a university, we have students taking our graphic communications courses from all over campus, many with backgrounds in web. Since we stress the area of print, I have pushed the following philosophy on file formats.
For raster images:
.jpg is acceptable, .tiff is better
All flies should be flattened
You should never place a native format (.psd) into a layout program that is designed for print.
If you want to drop a background, you create a clipping path and save the file as an .eps.
For vector images:
All placed file should be .eps, not ai.
With the fluidity of CS products, Adobe allows for placement of many different types of file formats but I always felt that the statements above should be followed without exception.
Does anyone have any general comments on these statements?
thanks
For raster images:
.jpg is acceptable, .tiff is better
All flies should be flattened
You should never place a native format (.psd) into a layout program that is designed for print.
If you want to drop a background, you create a clipping path and save the file as an .eps.
For vector images:
All placed file should be .eps, not ai.
With the fluidity of CS products, Adobe allows for placement of many different types of file formats but I always felt that the statements above should be followed without exception.
Does anyone have any general comments on these statements?
thanks