Supported Applications and Versions
File Formats Not Supported
Postscript Files
Screen and Printer Fonts
Placed Images
Bitmap Images and Vector Graphics
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Listed below are the programs we currently support, followed by the most current version we
are operating. It is strongly suggested that files be sent to us created from one of these
programs. We consider each of them to be powerful graphics tools and industry-standards for
the printing business.
- Adobe Illustrator 10.0 or lower
- Adobe Pagemaker 7.0 or lower
- Adobe Photoshop 6.0 or lower
- CorelDRAW! EPS Files*
- Freehand 10.0 or lower
- Quark XPress 4.0 or lower
* Due to font inconsistencies, we can no longer accept native CorelDRAW! files (*.cdr). However, we can accept files from CorelDRAW! that have been exported as Adobe on exporting your CorelDRAW! file as an EPS, please visit our Art File Setup section.
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To find out more about these great graphics and design packages, we encourage you
to visit the following sites:
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Listed below are programs or file types we cannot use. Many of these applications do not offer
the advanced features needed to properly process electronic art files. This list has been compiled
from previous jobs and does not include all unacceptable file types.
- Adobe PDF Files
- AnaGraph
- ScanVec CASmate*
- Claris Works
- CorelDRAW! Files***
- Gerber Scientific Products*
- Microsoft Excel
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- Microsoft PowerPoint
- Microsoft Publisher
- Microsoft Word
- Microsoft Works
- Paintshop Pro
- Print Shop Deluxe
- WordPerfect
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* It is possible for us to use EPS files exported from these programs. However, these
EPS files contain incomplete information and there is a chance of "cleanup" charges.
** Due to the pixel compression method of these file types, they cannot be printed at
high resolution. Therefore, we cannot accept GIFs and JPEGs as suitable electronic art.
*** Due to font inconsistencies, we can no longer accept native CorelDRAW! files (*.cdr).
However, we can accept files from CorelDRAW! that have been exported as Adobe Illustrator documents (*.ai).
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Due to our need to edit documents, we cannot accept postscript files (.ps/.prn) as valid electronic art. We
cannot properly step and repeat postscript files. And because we are a flexographic printer and our
printing plates are made from a polymer material, we must allow for plate distortion. Since postscript
files are uneditable, we cannot "stretch" the image to meet the calculated amount of distortion. Any
postscript files received will be printed to paper and used as camera-ready artwork.
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Fonts are normally necessary to print text from a file. To print text from a document, the computer
needs both the printer (outline) font and the screen (bitmapped) font. Without the screen font, the
printer font cannot be utilized and the font will default. Without the printer font, the screen font
can only provide a rough representation of the text. To the right are examples of printer fonts; below
are examples of screen fonts. We have access to the entire Adobe Font Library and Corel Font Library (version 8),
as well as the Bitstream Typeshop.
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Examples of Printer Font icons
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Examples of a font suitcase, which contains screen fonts or TrueType fonts
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When setting up your electronic art, please use PostScript fonts over TrueType fonts. Since the
image setter is a PostScript device, the use of TrueType fonts may cause unpredictable results. At
the very least, the printing of your art will be slow, since the fonts must be converted to
PostScript prior to printing.
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We are currently only set-up to accept Macintosh fonts for all applications. PC fonts sent with
CorelDRAW! files will be utilized and the order will be processed as electronic art. PC fonts
sent with Pagemaker files will be printed to paper as camera-ready artwork. In the event there is a
graphic in the Pagemaker file, the text will be camera-ready and added to the graphic as electronic
art. We are currently not able to accept PC fonts for jobs other than CorelDRAW! or Pagemaker.
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Applications that allow images to be placed often retain enough information to allow a preview of the image.
This preview will normally give you an idea of how the image is supposed to print. However, it does not
contain the proper information to print the graphic at higher resolutions. Files printed with missing graphics
either omit the graphic altogether or print a "rough" representation that normally is unacceptable. Without
the graphic, electronic art jobs cannot normally be printed to film.
Some programs, such as Pagemaker and Freehand, allow the file to be embedded within the document, including
the placed image's information inside the actual file. This may seem like the solution to sending
separate image files, but we would highly suggest including the graphic file separately. When graphic files
are embedded within files they become uneditable. If changes have to be made after the graphic is embedded,
the graphic file will have to be modified and embedded again. With a normal link, a placed graphic can be
modified, changes saved and updated, and the job will be ready for composition.
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Most computer graphic files fall into one of two categories: bitmap images and vector graphics. Bitmap images
are composed of pixels, or bits, in a grid, or map. When all of the different pixels are viewed as a whole, the
individual pieces give the illusion of an image. Bitmap images are good at reproducing subtle shading found in
continuous-tone images, such as photographs. Vector graphics are made up of objects such as circles and squares.
These objects are composed of lines and curves that are defined mathematically. Vector graphics are excellent
for artwork creation because of their versatility.
Spot printing cannot accept many types of bitmap images. The individual pixels that
make up a bitmap image are mixtures of either CMYK or RGB. This makes multi-color jobs using bitmap images
impossible to separate into spot colors. Bitmap images that we can accept are crisp black and white images. We can also accept
multi-color bitmap images that are printing as a composite, or as just one ink color. In either case, we must
emphasize the need to save the bitmap image at a high resolution. We print to film at a resolution of 1270 dpi,
but saving the file at 600 dpi would normally suffice. When scanning images, light shades of gray often appear
where the image should be white. This is normally due to the image mode in which the image is saved. If the
image being scanned is a photograph or contains screens or tints, save the file as a gray scale bitmap image.
Otherwise, please save the file as a black and white bitmap image. The file format we would suggest saving your
bitmap image is Tagged Image File Format, or a TIFF (.tif).
Vector graphics are the files we prefer. Programs such as CorelDRAW!, Freehand, and Illustrator create vector-
based images that are easily manipulated and editable. When an object needs to appear as a particular color,
vector-based programs define that object as that color. Colors used in vector graphics are solid, without
variation. This allows the file to be easily separated into its different color plates. And since vector graphics
are mathematically based, resolution is never an issue. Objects are defined with coordinates and calculated
mathematically, providing smooth curves when printing. We would highly suggest setting up your artwork in
vector-based graphic packages.
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