Quite a luxury to be able to dictate to your customer base.
In most cases, I cannot...
... but when I can, believe me I strictly forbid the text in Photoshop (or I warn the customer for an extra cost)
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rich apollo said:
Something that nobody has mentioned about the Photoshop PDF is that the printer may not be able to trap it.
You're right... and trapping is impossible because of a strange crappy structure of the text in the PDF, and it's for the same reasons that no modification or correction can be done by PitStop (I mentioned that!)
Photoshop vector data is interpreted as CT information with what amounts to a clipping path.
Not exactly: vector text is real vector text, but all handled as clipping paths, placed over coloured CT areas: the clipping path gives the shape of the letters, and letting the CT coloured area appear through the clipping path gives the wanted colour to the text...
And one problem I have often seen with text in Photoshop PDF is missing accent on upper-case letters or missing descent on "g", "j", "p", "q" and "y" or missing low part of commas...
... simply because the coloured CT area is created to fit as close as possible with the outer limits of the text, and sometimes Photoshop "forgets" to pay attention to some "extra" things over and/or under the main text and the CT is just a little bit to small to cover the whole text, letting the accent or descent uncoloured... and invisible.
(using Illustrator to examin the text shows that the accent and the descent exist, but accent are higher than the upper limit of the CT, and descent go lower than the lower limit of the CT)
I would say TIF or PSD for CTs and .ai for Illy.
.ai for Illy... yes... but only Illustrator can open .AI datas!!! InDesign cannot!!!
That's why Illustrator .AI files are 2 components files, and (by defaut) when you output a .AI from Illustrator, you also add PDF datas... and when you import your .AI file into Indy, Indy uses only the PDF part, neglecting the .AI part.
(simply try to save an Illustrator file in AI format without the PDF compatibility, then import this file in an Indy image block and look at what happens
)
Photoshop EPS is obsolete in most cases... but only EPS allows extra pantone colours in a DCS file...
Illustrator EPS is obsolete, but EPS has IMHO facilities for the placement of the picture in an image box that AI has not...
For example, .AI files ignore all the objects or parts of objects outside the document size...
You make a business-card in Illustrator: first you set the page-size of your doc to 55 x 85 mm (sorry, I don't know the usual size of business cards in inches), and you create your card in this page... and, as you are a good designer, you don't forget to put 3 mm of bleed around your page! then you save as AI file and you import your card in Indy: there is no bleed... because the bleeds are outside the page and AI format ignore all the stuff out of the page, so the bleeds are missing...
... resave as EPS, import in Indy: you have the bleeds
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WharfRat said:
PDF is THE format for files these days.
Illy files to PDF
Photoshop files to PDF (PDP)
Yes, PDF is the format for files these days... but is it really necessary to make everything in PDF???
Illustrator files as PDF... why not...
... but Illustrator files are mostly 2 components files, and by defaut when you output a PDF from Illustrator, you also add the .AI datas... and that's why you can open a Illy PDF the same way than an .AI file: because Illy uses the included .AI datas instead of PDF datas which are no use...
... so, it means that when you work on a big Illustrator file, during some days, each evening when you save your daily job as PDF, you embed .AI datas in your PDF, and the next day to go on working on your "PDF" you will only open the .AI datas... so, what the use of saving as PDF if you never use the PDF part? you only make your file bigger unusefuly... so, simply save as in .ai format...
... and don't forget that Illustrator files are mostly 2 components files, and by defaut when you output a .AI from Illustrator, you also add PDF datas... so, in order to drop the file size, don't forget to remove the option that adds the PDF part!!!
(but don't forget to re-active this option when your job is finished to output a file ready to import in Indy
)
In fact, saving from Illustrator in .AI or in PDF without taking care of the options and letting them as by defaut ("Compatible PDF" for AI file, "Make an editable file" for PDF file) makes globally almost exactly the same file: a two-component file containing a PDF and AI datas. The 2 (major) differences are in the control over the PDF and which part is considered as the "main" part:
- if saved as PDF, the PDF is "over" the .AI datas, you have control over the PDF options, the file is tagged as a PDF, and a double-click opens it in Acrobat,
- if saved as .AI, the .AI datas are "over" the PDF, the file is tagged as an Illustrator file, and a double click opens it in Illustrator...
... and for both files:
- when imported in InDesign, or rasterized in Photoshop, only the PDF part is used,
- when open in Illustrator, only the AI datas are used.
Photoshop files to PDF? why not... but why?
PDF is like a box... a box into which you can put what you want: vectors, rasters, links, informations, etc.
So, of course, if you wish, you can put the pixels of your picture in a box... but it's like putting a post-card in an enveloppe: it's no use, because the post-card is made with a place for the stamp and the address so that it can travel on its own, without enveloppe...
... so, why put the pixels of a TIFF picture in a PDF-box: TIFF is a file format that can handle pixels on its own, without the help of an extra unuseful box!
And if you put your post-card in an enveloppe, you hide some informations which can no more be seen at first sight... same, when you put your pixels in a PDF-box, you hide some informations like resolution and pixels number, information that InDesign can no more see and display to user.
Ok, you made the box, so you know what's in the box and you don't need this informations... but you are (perhaps) not alone to work on your files: when you give your file to a printer, perhaps that he would like - or need - to know this informations...
And I especially agree with
Lukas: "
There is no way to tell just by placing a PDF if text is raster or vector."... it should not be important if everybody knew exactly and perfectly the job, and knew exactly in which cases use vectors and in which cases use rasters, and use ALWAYS vector when needed...
... but today many users do not know how to do the job, or believe they know and in fact they don't and make crap: so we cannot trust the files whe receive
(each time I receive a PDF for a job, each time I wonder what is it: rasters or vectors? crap or usable file? what kind of problem will fall on my fragile shoulders???...)
(for example, asking a company or a client for a vector Illustrator logo, I often receive an AI or Illustrator EPS file (or a PDF) containing ONLY a crappy embedded JPEG picture...)