"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
For us we say vector only because as soon as you say "ya, I can take that .tiff" the next order is sent as a 1"x1" .tiff and they want a 14" x 14" print. Their response is - "Well last time you took it." It sounds like you know well enough what you are doing, but 99.999999999999999% of people don't. It is much easier to make a policy - vector only, and stick to it. That way you don't end up on a Friday with someone that sent over this "wicked cool artwork I got off google images" which ends up being a 9 color and awesome quality at 1.5" x 1.5" and 12dpi.....
I have one simple question. Maybe someone can set me straight.Seems like the more artwork I do for other companies and individuals, the more I hear "we only print with vector art" Really?I just sent out a CorelDraw x6 file to a client and it had a monochrome bitmap as part of the art. It was a simple overlay that distressed a section of the design. I get it back saying that they can't print that way or if they do there will be a substantial up-charge.I don't get it. If you print a Corel file, does it matter? It was all spot color. Designed for a one color print. As long as there are no transparencies or need for halftones, shouldn't this not be an issue?Enlighten me.
Just find it odd he is involved with someone else's thread pertaining to this exact question then he pops the question as his own here. Just a bit fishy IMHO