"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
gradients to solid colors worked great.Re going into PS to Sep.. what's the easiest way to choke underbases in PS?in Illustrator I make a new layer with the art, convert everything I want to choke to a single color, stroke it all with a .4pt stroke on the line, 'expand' my stroke, merge, and then delete. it would be too cool if somebody had an illustrator action to just 'do' it... maybe they do?Thanks guys!-J
Take your gradients and turn them to solid colors before you flatten the transparency. That way the objects that have gradients in them become their own object after the flattening. Then you can go in and redo the gradients using spot colors. Just copy the art and paste the copy off to the side so you can match the gradients when you recolor them. This also gives you independent objects that you can use for a base. This will keep Illustrator from trying to turn the gradient into a bunch of different slices in a gradient. If that does not help PM and I can look at it for you.
I prefer Illy for all my artwork since i mostly do spot colour prints and I most frequently use the path>offset function to create a choke or trap. Just a few steps shorter than expanding a stroke and knocking it out. The other offset path option is under the Effects>Path menu which keeps the adjustment editable until expanded. Creating an action to run this step automatically is pretty simple and probably a worthwhile spend of time for anyone repeating this often, but for some reason I've never done it myself...