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Thanks to Vern for plucking the correct terminology off the tip of my tongue. Yes, vector vs. raster formats is exactly what I'm talking about. Our graphic designer passed along this bit of advice: > When you are in Quark: > > 1. Choose "FILE > COLLECT FOR OUTPUT" (This gathers together all the > images and files used to create the layout. Any incorrectly linked > files will need to be located and relinked during this stage). > 2. Choose "FILE > SAVE AS EPS... > > Then the file can be opened in Illustrator and saved as an .AI file. We think this may be at least part of the reason why your initial attempt to create an EPS file had such poor quality. If one or more of the images placed in Quark are not linked correctly to the source file, then the image is merely ghosted in Quark and it might not print or export properly. That said, the DPI setting may be yet another issue on top of that. If I were you, I would get on the horn with the vendor and ask exactly *why* they need the layout in AI format. What do they intend to do that requires a vector format? Occasionally, we encounter graphic designers who "require" a specific file type when the reality is that they merely "prefer" that file type. It's hard to say until you ask a few more questions. Here's the thing, according to our graphic designer it's very unlikely that you'll be able to convert a Quark file into an AI file that will behave exactly like a natively-created AI file from Illustrator. We tried several things here on our side with Quark and Illustrator, and all the results had varying levels of funkiness. It's almost easier (for a graphic designer) to recreate the layout in Illustrator using the text and source images used to create the Quark file. Doug, as far as I know, there's no such thing as an AI reader. I know that Acrobat Reader can view EPS files, and I know that you can use PhotoShop to view a rasterized version of an AI file (perhaps Paint Shop Pro can do the same thing). I hope some of this helps. John ---- Quadrant Software http://www.quadrantsoftware.com/ 800-258-3399 -----Original Message----- From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bob Cagle Sent: Thursday, December 16, 2004 2:44 PM To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users Subject: RE: [PCTECH] Adobe Illustrator This is all extremely unfamiliar ground for me, I appreciate any advice I can get. I am downloading the demo of Illustrator right now - don't know if that will help me any, but at least I can see what the vendor is seeing. I have already tried exporting or "saving as" .AI from Quark Express and it does not have that functionality. I am also going to double-check my DPI settings on the .EPS files. Thanks, Bob -----Original Message----- From: Vernon Hamberg [mailto:vhamberg@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, December 16, 2004 1:37 PM To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users Subject: RE: [PCTECH] Adobe Illustrator Sounds like John is describing raster (DPI) vs vector (paths) formats. Is EPS a raster of vector format? Perhaps your vendor can work with a different vector format. I see that Paint Shop Pro can convert to encapsulated PostScript with extensions of .ps, .ai, or .eps - is any of that helpful? Vern
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