I have created a large file with many photos and text in it (CorelDraw). Everything is 300 dpi in CMYK. When I choose to print it (tiled) I get the message you see below.
I have searched through all the photos one-by-one, plus looked at the document using wireframe for something hidden but cannot find anything. Is there a way to have Corel show me where that item is? It is very annoying to get these printing issue notices without it showing where the problem lies.
niagaramouse said:I have created a large file with many photos and text in it (CorelDraw). Everything is 300 dpi in CMYK. When I choose to print it (tiled) I get the message you see below.
Ahh.. I think i see. When you tile it later, the DPI will drop from what you have on Draw's page
niagaramouse said:Is there a way to have Corel show me where that item is? It is very annoying to get these printing issue notices without it showing where the problem lies.
Yes, we have a awesome macro coming out that solves this and many other issues: CDR Preflight. It will notify you of problems and take you to them in your file.
For now, instead of tiling, copy your contents to a new file for a test, and scale it to output size. I'll bet some bitmaps will be under 96 DPI...
Jeff Harrison said: For now, instead of tiling, copy your contents to a new file for a test, and scale it to output size. I'll bet some bitmaps will be under 96 DPI...
Thanks Jeff, by the way, you are getting younger and younger looking while the rest of us are aging, what's your secret Sorry, I don't understand your instructions - scale it to output size. I should have explained, this project is 26" x 18.5" that is why I have to tile it to print. I just tried going into print without tiling it and that message about the 96 dpi bitmap is still there, of couse now it also says output won't fit on media. Can you be more explicit about scaling it and how this will show the lo res bitmap?
niagaramouse said:Thanks Jeff, by the way, you are getting younger and younger looking while the rest of us are aging, what's your secret
that is called "excess of PhotoPaint"