[SIZE=“2”][U]BLEED[/U][/SIZE]
**[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] ** What’s “bleed”?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] Bleed is the portion of a print job that goes beyond the document boundries (aka Trim) that will be cut off during print, to help insure that color or image provides a clean edge to edge display.
Lets say I had a magazine here’s how the setup would go:
http://www.beyondthepixel.com/print_faqs/doc_bleed/index.html
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**[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] ** What is a good bleed size?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] Bleed sizes are always dependant on your printer. But a good standard bleed size is .25" larger than your document size.
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**[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] ** When do I need to use a bleed?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] You only need to use a bleed when you have a edge to edge document that uses color, or an image. You do not need to bleed anything that is contained inside of the document bounds.
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[SIZE=“2”][U]RESOLUTION[/U][/SIZE]
[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] What’s Screen resolution and Print resolution?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] Screen resolution is the number of dots per inch on your monitor. for Windows it is 72 dot per inch and for mac it is 96 dot per inch
Print resolution is also the number of dots per inch on something you print on. This is set higher depending on what type of materials you are printing on
eg.
glossy paper or normal paper = 300 dot per inch
newspaper (paper that are porous) = 144 dot per inch (because the ink will bleed over)
[whisper]provided by Gupps http://www.kirupa.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1829287&postcount=4[/whisper]
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[SIZE=“2”][U]COLOR[/U][/SIZE]
[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] What is CMYK, RGB and what should I use for Print and Web?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] RGB is the color mode used by your monitor is should be restricted to Web. CMYK is the standard printing format using Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black to create all it’s colors. Never send an RGB file to print.
[whisper]Provided by durtyburd http://www.kirupa.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1831341&postcount=7[/whisper]
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[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] What is PANTONE?, Why is it used?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] Pantone is a color matching system (commonly called PMS colors). This is used when you want a specific color and you can pick it from a PMS book. These are common in logos and T-shirts or low cost print jobs that won’t use the full 4color process. Pantone goes even more in depth too with metallic, flourescent and opaque inks. There’s alos tons of other benefits for specialty printing where you’d add a PMS color after the 4C process. Try to pick up a pantone book and you’ll understand more fully, way too much to discuss here. You could start with their website too www.pantone.com/
[whisper]Provided by durtyburd http://www.kirupa.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1831341&postcount=7[/whisper]
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[COLOR=“Red”]Q:[/COLOR] My artwork is in Spot Colours/or/RGB and my client wants to print CMYK, Do I need to convert it? Can I Convert it? what would give me the closest convertion result?
[COLOR=“RoyalBlue”]A:[/COLOR] As mentioned early don’t ever print RGB. If you have am image in RGB you’re best bet is to use photoshop to convert (Image>Mode>CMYK). The color won’t be exact so you may still need to go in and color correct some. The same with spot colors, use photoshop to convert images and illustrator to convert vector art.
[whisper]Provided by durtyburd http://www.kirupa.com/forum/showpost.php?p=1831341&postcount=7[/whisper]
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