Gregg
Well-known member
Personally, I love layered PDFs, and they are part of our standard workflow. However, I have some print vendors (both in the US and overseas) that have resistance to receiving layered PDFs. Most of the time, when we push back, the print vendor will accept the layered PDF, but sometimes they simply refuse, stating they cannot work with what was supplied (without giving any further explanation, mainly because of language barriers). On the flip side, I have some print vendors who laugh at the notion that others wouldn't accept layered PDFs. So is it simply the print vendor being stubborn, or are there some worklfows that reject layered PDFs?
An example of what we'd send out:
- Book jacket file with spot UV, the layer structure of the PDF would mirror the layer structure of the InDesign file, meaning the spot UV layer is above the artwork and text. The spot UV is a spot color and the elements are set to overprint.
The reason I like layered PDFs is:
• only need to supply 1 PDF
• export takes less time, since you are only exporting 1 PDF
• you can easily review the PDF ensuring that the spot uv, foil, emboss, etc, plates are lining up properly
An example of what we'd send out:
- Book jacket file with spot UV, the layer structure of the PDF would mirror the layer structure of the InDesign file, meaning the spot UV layer is above the artwork and text. The spot UV is a spot color and the elements are set to overprint.
The reason I like layered PDFs is:
• only need to supply 1 PDF
• export takes less time, since you are only exporting 1 PDF
• you can easily review the PDF ensuring that the spot uv, foil, emboss, etc, plates are lining up properly