Until now, I have supplied a book cover as a PDF/X-1a file and it "prints" with no issues on digital presses. A printer I am contemplating using accepts files for the cover only as a bmp, gif, jpeg, png, or tiff (but not PDF), at a maximum of 300 dpi.
The underlying work was created in a drawing program (LibreOffice Draw) and consists of boxes with color fill (RGB F 0 0, 0 0 0, and 230 230 230), text boxes, and an ISBN insert. The drawing program enables direct export in various formats at a user-selected resolution and also has a plugin for image export. I have used the latter to generate a png file; in Photoshop and GIMP, the png format appears to yield the clearest and sharpest product.
When the file is viewed on the printer's interface, it shows fuzziness (for lack of a better word) around the text. The printer asserts in part that the resolution is not sufficient, but it's at the maximum of 300 dpi (greater resolution overruns the allowable borders for the cover). My initial reaction is that the interface is causing the improper rendering, something I have seen occur in previews (e.g., an Epson ink jet printer interface).
A cropped portion of the printer's viewer image is shown here:
The original png with a similar crop as viewed on my machine (in this case from an image viewer) is shown here:
Perhaps I've overlooked something obvious.
The underlying work was created in a drawing program (LibreOffice Draw) and consists of boxes with color fill (RGB F 0 0, 0 0 0, and 230 230 230), text boxes, and an ISBN insert. The drawing program enables direct export in various formats at a user-selected resolution and also has a plugin for image export. I have used the latter to generate a png file; in Photoshop and GIMP, the png format appears to yield the clearest and sharpest product.
When the file is viewed on the printer's interface, it shows fuzziness (for lack of a better word) around the text. The printer asserts in part that the resolution is not sufficient, but it's at the maximum of 300 dpi (greater resolution overruns the allowable borders for the cover). My initial reaction is that the interface is causing the improper rendering, something I have seen occur in previews (e.g., an Epson ink jet printer interface).
A cropped portion of the printer's viewer image is shown here:
The original png with a similar crop as viewed on my machine (in this case from an image viewer) is shown here:
Perhaps I've overlooked something obvious.