hi everybody. i have an issue that is stumping me!!
i work in corel x4 and export powercliped artwork for printing on our roland xp300v using versaworks
I will do my layouts in corel to save material, then export all this as a eps file (as rgb or cmyk, depending on the type of file) and open and print in versaworks. this works wonderfully. Most of the time. Then sometimes i powerclip a jpg and do my layouts for instance 3 of the same thing copy and pasted to fit into the required width... then ONE of these will print in another colour!
i don't get it! its the same file as all the others, it cannot be the only one with another colour profile. its ONE eps file!!
i thought it might be the exporting process or the ripping process, but just now i had the same problem, and deleted the file in roland, and re-exported the whole thing from corel and re-ripped and to make the changes complete i flipped the file so the bottom is at the top.
and it did exactly the bloody same thing! the same logo, at the bottom in stead of the top printed differently
somebody have ANY idea what the heck is going on?
thank you too brute for diverting some of your brainwaves to my conundrum.
I need to use .eps cos i have only prints with cut lines for the logos we put on garments and the printed vinyl for stickers.
pardon my ignorance but what would you print on a roland with a pdf that doesn't need cutting? I've been doing this for bout 2 years and only know my little bit of the industry.
lunanoir said:i converted al my bmps to cmyk like jeff said, and exported as cmyk and did a small test. it printed perfectly. everything the same colour
excellent...
lunanoir said:then i thought well, what bout the cmyk bmps exported as rgb and when i printed it, one of the suckers were a different colour.
non-excellent...
lunanoir said:Now the big question is why this happens? why export 3 out of 4 logos perfectly, but the last one has to be a different colour? why not all of them?
shrug... no idea...
lunanoir said:anywho, thanx jeff for the cmyk converting hint.
Glad to help.
NOW... let's talk about your file. ;-)
Have a look at the difference in the below...
I suggest to output in high-quality mode only for small decals like this
EPS settings. No header needed. You're creating a massive one at 300 DPI when exporting. I think Versaworks renders it's own sample anyway.
Objects: send Bitmaps as: change to CMYK IMO
lol yes i know this logo bites, but this is their corporate id and i have the roland so i get files to print from our other branch so its not my job really to fix their ugly logos or her cruddy cutlines, though i do, but they had the deadline from hell so this was a real rush job and it shows.
you should've seen the other logos that went with this! low res pixelated images. squashed logos.
some times clients need to be saved from themselves eh?
lunanoir said:you should've seen the other logos that went with this! low res pixelated images. squashed logos.
Yeah, I've seen similar things come to the shops I freelance at also. It's such a waste. I've seen 10,000 printing jobs where the artwork was garbage, but the client was proud of what they designed.
lunanoir said:some times clients need to be saved from themselves eh?
I'm actually quite firm with customers these days. Here's why: when the marketing campaign FAILS because of the garbage artwork, I want them to realize why it failed. So some fast strategies to get the point across in a diplomatic way:
At the end of the day, you want this order and the money.
But, I'll tell you this: by caring about the customer's goals, they'll respect you for your advice, and this leads to a business relationship that can last decades. That's where the real money is, not just one sale that you jam through the system for a quick buck. You avoid the: "You guys are the printing professionals, you should have told me!"