How much should I increase artboard size before render?
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No, the 300 represents DPI (Dots Per Inch) which is pretty close to Photoquality. So it would be 8"(20cm) x 300 = 2400 pixels wide.
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OK thanks but I´ve tried larger renderings than that and it´s still not super sharp, but on the other hand I´m so used to illustrator I might have to accept that rendering animations will never be as sharp as vector.
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Some applications get weird about DPI, and just having a large image isn't going to work properly. I'd imagine Illustrator has a way to handle it, but I'm not that familiar with it these days, been over a decade since I've loaded that app up. On a computer screen there's really no difference between having a large image, zoomed out, and having a small image with a high DPI. DPI is describing something during the printing process, so it can get a little confusing when diddling about with this type of thing on a computer. Your computer screen has pixels, and the screen itself will have it's own pixel density (retina displays for example have 200-400 pixels per inch), regardless of what your image is set to be... so DPI or PPI (pixels per inch) can be a little... ::stares at ground:: perplexing. By default we render out at 72dpi, and we don't have a place to change that setting.
There should be a way to change the dpi of an image in photoshop. A quick google search found this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NT9j0O4kyrg
I use GIMP (it's essentially the same exact thing, except 100% free), and the dpi setting is found where you resize the image.
Hope that helps!
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"On a computer screen there's really no difference between having a large image, zoomed out, and having a small image with a high DPI"
Yes, that´s correct.
I actually tried importing a large rendered picture into Photoshop and scalining it down while rasising the DPI, and now it looks good in Illustrator
Thanks for all your help!
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@larv said:
OK thanks but I´ve tried larger renderings than that and it´s still not super sharp, but on the other hand I´m so used to illustrator I might have to accept that rendering animations will never be as sharp as vector.
You should be able to link the high resolution image in illustrator and scale it within illustrator without losing resolution. It depends on what settings you use for printing or export that will determine how much of that resolution you keep when bringing it out of illustrator.
In photoshop - there's an option when changing the image size where you can uncheck "resample image" and it doesn't change the absolute resolution, only the print size.
Though for printing raster documents, I'd recommend using inDesign. Much better link and page management.
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Yes, resizing pictures in Illustrator is no problem, but If I want to change the DPI I do that in Photoshop first before importing into illustrator. For some reason my rendered Vray picture didn´t work as I´m used to with photos.
"Though for printing raster documents, I'd recommend using inDesign. Much better link and page management."
That part of the work process is no problem, I work with both profesionally since 8 years. I use both for different purposes.
Thanks!
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I just mention that, as I've never been happy with using raster images in illustrator. Often, I'll do all the vector work for a layout in illustrator and then reference that into inDesign where I can then drop in the graphics. I've been using "inDesign" since the days of Pagemaker
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"using raster images in illustrator."
Umm.. what exactly is a raster image again? No, I didn´t lie about my work as a graphic news designer, and although I´ve heard the term raster image I´m not sure what it is actually. Please note that my Adobe set is in swedish.
"I'll do all the vector work for a layout in illustrator and then reference that into inDesign"
Same here. Doing vector graphics in InDesign sounds horrible -
@larv said:
Umm.. what exactly is a raster image again? No, I didn´t lie about my work as a graphic news designer, and although I´ve heard the term raster image I´m not sure what it is actually. Please note that my Adobe set is in swedish.
raster just means it is made up of pixels - like a jpg, png, tiff, psd, etc. When you zoom in, you see pixels instead of linework. Must be there's a different terminology in your location.
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OK, I get it. Pixel images like photos.. Yeah, we use them on occasion at the newspaper where I work
Thanks!
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"I've never been happy with using raster images in illustrator."
That´s a new one. I´ve never had any problem with Illustrator not showing photos properly. Never heard of this problem from anyone. In fact, if there had been problems like that me and my workmates couldn´t do the work we do.
Strange. -
nah, I just mean that clipping masks are a pain, I find adjusting images much more intuitive in inDesign. The other thing I really dislike is that file sizes get really huge in illustrator if there are high res images in there. Illustrator doesn't seem to use any compression for raster files.
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Clipping masks are a pain in Illustrator? Guess it depends on what you want to achive. Simple things I´ll do in InDesign if it gets the job done, but most of the time I do it in Illustrator, sometimes together with Photoshop. I have to most of the times since photos and graphics often overlap in my work, and often in quite "complex" ways.
But I guess everyone uses different techniqes. Depends on what your work involves. I suspect you don´t work with infographics?
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true, I don't work on magazine layouts. Usually I'm just doing fairly simple presentations. I use illustrator most often to work on CAD stuff like site plans. I can see for complicated combination of graphics and vector, illustrator is the obvious choice. I'm curious now if you have any particular method to deal with large file sizes for high resolution images in illustrator.
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Just change the size of the picture in Photoshop if it´s huge. It would take you 10 seconds to do this, and just set the DPI to, let´s say, 180-240. Or more, your choice. Done.
By the way, I only work with newspaper design, which doesn´t involve 10 meter wide banners. I don´t know if that changes anything. It might.
EDIT: Well yes it must. That file size would be crazy large. Don´t know how to deal with that type of stuff.I think saving as PDF, rather than EPS, also decreases the size somewhat, but changing nothing to the work or file. We save in PDF all the time. But I might be wrong about the size decreasing though.
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yeah, I guess we're talking apples to oranges I'm usually doing high resolution renderings filling most of an A1 sheet. At photo resolution the file size in illustrator can easily be over 100 Mb.
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OK I understand, but hmm.. is 100 megs really that large for a very high res picture in A1 format? Guess you would know if it´s smaller inside InDesign.
How much smaller in size does one of your pictures become in InDesign? 70% of the Illustrator size? 50%
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A multiple page document in inDesign is just a few Mb. The reason is that inDesign only loads a low resolution preview instead of the entire bitmap file. So a document with something like 5 pages might be 7 Mb. Each one of those in illustrator with the full image would be like 120 Mb each = 600 Mb stored. Since I usually already have these files in Photoshop (already 100+ Mb there) duplicating this in illustrator is crazy.
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Alright, I understand.
You have a message by the way.
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