David Kunkel
Active member
Why not just convert Photoshop text to curves?
Why not just convert Photoshop text to curves?
Although I'm 'only a designer', I spent 12 years in a print shop doing customer design services, production art, and preflight. Now I do a lot of tradeshow graphics where Photoshop is the best way to deal with large (huge) bitmaps, type, and transparency together--this is where Photoshop excels over InDesign, Quark, or Illustrator. I always convert my Photoshop text to a vector shape before sending these files to the production house, by right-clicking on the text layer and choosing "Convert to shape". I'll split it onto multiple layers using the vector tools if I have to recreate multi-color text (such as a contrast-colored bullet). I'll usually follow up by saving as a Photoshop EPS, though that's not necessary. The EPS preview adds a lot to the file size but compression brings it most of the way back; I'll make the EPS half size at double resolution to reduce the preview's pixel count and minimize the size bump. The resulting vector art is well received by all the vendors I work with, and I think it will be seen by the trapping software just like any other generic vector path would.
Why not just convert Photoshop text to curves?
Although I'm 'only a designer', I spent 12 years in a print shop doing customer design services, production art, and preflight. Now I do a lot of tradeshow graphics where Photoshop is the best way to deal with large (huge) bitmaps, type, and transparency together--this is where Photoshop excels over InDesign, Quark, or Illustrator. I always convert my Photoshop text to a vector shape before sending these files to the production house, by right-clicking on the text layer and choosing "Convert to shape". I'll split it onto multiple layers using the vector tools if I have to recreate multi-color text (such as a contrast-colored bullet). I'll usually follow up by saving as a Photoshop EPS, though that's not necessary. The EPS preview adds a lot to the file size but compression brings it most of the way back; I'll make the EPS half size at double resolution to reduce the preview's pixel count and minimize the size bump. The resulting vector art is well received by all the vendors I work with, and I think it will be seen by the trapping software just like any other generic vector path would.