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Guideline to Saving Art From Illustrator for Digital Signage

  1. Illustrator User Guide
  2. Get to know Illustrator
    1. Introduction to Illustrator
      1. What's new in Illustrator
      2. Common questions
      3. Illustrator organisation requirements
      4. Illustrator for Apple silicon
    2. Workspace
      1. Workspace basics
      2. Create documents
      3. Tools
      4. Default keyboard shortcuts
      5. Customize keyboard shortcuts
      6. Artboards
      7. Customize the workspace
      8. Properties console
      9. Set preferences
      10. Touch Workspace
      11. Microsoft Surface Dial support in Illustrator
      12. Recovery, disengage, and automation
      13. Rotate view
      14. Rulers, grids, and guides
      15. Accessibility in Illustrator
      16. Condom Mode
      17. View artwork
      18. Use the Touch Bar with Illustrator
      19. Files and templates
      20. Synchronize settings using Adobe Creative Cloud
    3. Tools in Illustrator
      1. Selection
        1. Overview
        2. Choice
        3. Direct Selection
        4. Lasso
        5. Artboard
      2. Navigation
        1. Overview
        2. Zoom
        3. Rotate View
      3. Paint
        1. Overview
        2. Gradient
        3. Shape Builder
      4. Type
        1. Overview
        2. Blazon
        3. Blazon on Path
  3. Illustrator on the iPad
    1. Introduction to Illustrator on the iPad
      1. Illustrator on the iPad overview
      2. Illustrator on the iPad FAQs
      3. Organisation requirements | Illustrator on the iPad
      4. What you tin or cannot do on Illustrator on the iPad
    2. Workspace
      1. Illustrator on the iPad workspace
      2. Touch shortcuts and gestures
      3. Keyboard shortcuts for Illustrator on the iPad
      4. Manage your app settings
    3. Documents
      1. Piece of work with documents in Illustrator on the iPad
      2. Import Photoshop and Fresco documents
    4. Select and suit objects
      1. Create repeat objects
      2. Blend objects
    5. Drawing
      1. Draw and edit paths
      2. Describe and edit shapes
    6. Type
      1. Work with type and fonts
      2. Create text designs along a path
      3. Add together your ain fonts
    7. Work with images
      1. Vectorize raster images
    8. Color
      1. Apply colors and gradients
  4. Cloud documents
    1. Basics
      1. Work with Illustrator cloud documents
      2. Share and collaborate on Illustrator deject documents
      3. Upgrade cloud storage for Adobe Illustrator
      4. Illustrator cloud documents | Common questions
    2. Troubleshooting
      1. Troubleshoot create or save bug for Illustrator cloud documents
      2. Troubleshoot Illustrator deject documents problems
  5. Add and edit content
    1. Drawing
      1. Cartoon nuts
      2. Edit paths
      3. Draw pixel-perfect fine art
      4. Describe with the Pen, Curvature, or Pencil tool
      5. Draw simple lines and shapes
      6. Prototype Trace
      7. Simplify a path
      8. Define perspective grids
      9. Symbolism tools and symbol sets
      10. Suit path segments
      11. Blueprint a bloom in v easy steps
      12. Perspective cartoon
      13. Symbols
      14. Describe pixel-aligned paths for web workflows
    2. 3D effects and Adobe Substance materials
      1. About 3D effects in Illustrator
      2. Create 3D graphics
      3. Map artwork over 3D objects
      4. Create 3D objects
      5. Create 3D Text
    3. Colour
      1. About color
      2. Select colors
      3. Utilise and create swatches
      4. Adjust colors
      5. Employ the Adobe Color Themes console
      6. Colour groups (harmonies)
      7. Color Themes panel
      8. Recolor your artwork
    4. Painting
      1. About painting
      2. Pigment with fills and strokes
      3. Alive Paint groups
      4. Gradients
      5. Brushes
      6. Transparency and blending modes
      7. Utilise stroke on an object
      8. Create and edit patterns
      9. Meshes
      10. Patterns
    5. Select and arrange objects
      1. Select objects
      2. Layers
      3. Group and expand objects
      4. Move, marshal, and distribute objects
      5. Stack objects
      6. Lock, hide, and delete objects
      7. Duplicate objects
      8. Rotate and reflect objects
    6. Reshape objects
      1. Crop images
      2. Transform objects
      3. Combine objects
      4. Cut, divide, and trim objects
      5. Boob Warp
      6. Scale, shear, and distort objects
      7. Blend objects
      8. Reshape using envelopes
      9. Reshape objects with effects
      10. Build new shapes with Shaper and Shape Builder tools
      11. Work with Live Corners
      12. Enhanced reshape workflows with bear upon support
      13. Edit clipping masks
      14. Live shapes
      15. Create shapes using the Shape Architect tool
      16. Global editing
    7. Type
      1. Add text and work with type objects
      2. Manage text area
      3. Fonts and typography
      4. Format type
      5. Import and export text
      6. Format paragraphs
      7. Special characters
      8. Create type on a path
      9. Character and paragraph styles
      10. Tabs
      11. Text and type
      12. Observe missing fonts (Typekit workflow)
      13. Update text from Illustrator 10
      14. Arabic and Hebrew type
      15. Fonts | FAQ and troubleshooting tips
      16. Create 3D text effect
      17. Artistic typography designs
      18. Calibration and rotate type
      19. Line and graphic symbol spacing
      20. Hyphenation and line breaks
      21. Text enhancements
      22. Spelling and linguistic communication dictionaries
      23. Format Asian characters
      24. Composers for Asian scripts
      25. Create text designs with alloy objects
      26. Create a text poster using Image Trace
    8. Create special furnishings
      1. Work with effects
      2. Graphic styles
      3. Create a drop shadow
      4. Appearance attributes
      5. Create sketches and mosaics
      6. Drib shadows, glows, and feathering
      7. Summary of furnishings
    9. Web graphics
      1. Best practices for creating spider web graphics
      2. Graphs
      3. SVG
      4. Create animations
      5. Slices and image maps
  6. Import, export, and salve
    1. Import
      1. Import artwork files
      2. Import bitmap images
      3. Import artwork from Photoshop
      4. Place multiple files | Illustrator CC
      5. Unembed images
      6. Import Adobe PDF files
      7. Import EPS, DCS, and AutoCAD files
      8. Links information
    2. Creative Cloud Libraries in Illustrator
      1. Creative Cloud Libraries in Illustrator
    3. Save
      1. Save artwork
    4. Export
      1. Use Illustrator artwork in Photoshop
      2. Export artwork
      3. Collect assets and consign in batches
      4. Package files
      5. Create Adobe PDF files
      6. Excerpt CSS | Illustrator CC
      7. Adobe PDF options
      8. File information and metadata
  7. Printing
    1. Prepare for printing
      1. Gear up documents for printing
      2. Change the page size and orientation
      3. Specify crop marks for trimming or aligning
      4. Go started with big canvas
    2. Printing
      1. Overprint
      2. Print with color management
      3. PostScript printing
      4. Print presets
      5. Printer's marks and bleeds
      6. Print and save transparent artwork
      7. Trapping
      8. Print color separations
      9. Print gradients, meshes, and color blends
      10. White Overprint
  8. Automate tasks
    1. Information merge using the Variables panel
    2. Automation with scripts
    3. Automation with actions
  9. Troubleshooting
    1. Crash issues
    2. Recover files subsequently crash
    3. File problems
    4. GPU device driver issues
    5. Wacom device problems
    6. DLL file issues
    7. Memory issues
    8. Preferences file problems
    9. Font problems
    10. Printer issues
    11. Share crash report with Adobe

When you salve an Illustrator file in sure formats, the native transparency information is retained. For example, when you save a file in Illustrator CS (or after) EPS format, the file contains both native Illustrator information and EPS data. When you lot reopen the file in Illustrator, the native (unflattened) data is read. When y'all identify the file into another application, the EPS (flattened) data is read.

About flattening

If your certificate or artwork contains transparency, to be output it usually needs to undergo a procedure chosen flattening. Flattening divides transparent artwork into vector-based areas and rasterized areas. As artwork becomes more complex (mixing images, vectors, blazon, spot colors, overprinting, and so on), then does the flattening and its results.

Flattening may exist necessary when you print or when you relieve or export to other formats that don't support transparency. To retain transparency without flattening when yous create PDF files, save your file as Adobe PDF 1.4 (Acrobat 5.0) or afterwards.

Yous can specify flattening settings and and so save and apply them as transparency flattener presets. Transparent objects are flattened according to the settings in the selected flattener preset.

Transparency flattening cannot exist undone after the file is saved.

Overlapping art that is divided when flattened

Overlapping art is divided when flattened.

For more information on transparency output bug, see the Print Service Provider Resource page of the Adobe Solutions Network (ASN) (English only), available on the Adobe website.

File formats that retain transparency

When you save an Illustrator file in certain formats, the native transparency data is retained. For example, when you save a file in Illustrator CS (or later) EPS format, the file contains both native Illustrator data and EPS data. When y'all reopen the file in Illustrator, the native (unflattened) data is read. When you identify the file into another application, the EPS (flattened) information is read.

When possible, keep your file in a format in which native transparency data is retained, allowing you to brand edits every bit necessary.

Native transparency data is retained when you save to the post-obit formats:

  • AI9 and afterward

  • AI9 EPS and later

  • PDF 1.4 and later (when Preserve Illustrator Editing Capabilities pick is selected)

Illustrator flattens artwork when you perform any of the post-obit actions:

  • Print a file that contains transparency.

  • Salve a file that contains transparency in a legacy format such as native Illustrator 8 and earlier, Illustrator 8 EPS and before, or PDF 1.iii format. (For the Illustrator and Illustrator EPS formats, you lot can choose to discard transparency rather than flatten it.)

  • Export a file that contains transparency to a vector format that does not understand transparency (such as EMF or WMF).

  • Copy and paste transparent art from Illustrator into another application with both the AICB and the Preserve Appearance options checked (in the File Handling & Clipboard department of the Preferences dialog box).

  • Consign in SWF (Wink) or use the Flatten Transparency command with the Preserve Alpha Transparency option selected. This command lets you preview how artwork will look when exported in SWF.

For more than information on creating and printing transparency, see the Transparency white newspaper in the Adobe Technical Info/White Papers binder on the Illustrator CD. You can likewise find more information on printing and flattening files with transparency in the Adobe Illustrator User to User forum. This is a public forum that offers a wealth of tips and answers to frequently asked questions, and tin can be found at world wide web.adobe.com/support/forums.

Gear up transparency flattening options for printing

  1. Select Advanced on the left side of the Impress dialog box.

  2. Select a flattening preset from the Preset menu, or click Custom to set specific flattening options.

  3. If the artwork contains overprinted objects that interact with transparent objects, select an pick from the Overprints card. You can preserve, simulate, or discard overprints.

    If the artwork does not contain transparency, the certificate will not exist flattened and the flattening settings are non relevant. Employ the Flattener Preview console to determine which areas of the artwork contain transparency.

Transparency Flattener options

You can set Transparency Flattener options when creating, editing, or previewing flattener presets in Illustrator, InDesign, or Acrobat.

Highlight (preview) options

None (Color Preview)

Disables previewing.

Rasterized Complex Regions

Highlights the areas that will be rasterized for performance reasons (as adamant past the Rasters/Vectors slider). Keep in mind that the boundary of the highlight area has a higher probability of producing stitching problems (depending on the impress-commuter settings and the rasterization resolution). To minimize stitching bug, select Clip Complex Regions.

Transparent Objects

Highlights the objects that are sources of transparency, such equally objects with fractional opacity (including images with alpha channels), objects with blending modes, and objects with opacity masks. In addition, notation that styles and furnishings may contain transparency, and overprinted objects may be treated as sources of transparency if they are involved in transparency or if the overprint needs to be flattened.

All Affected Objects

Highlights all objects that are involved in transparency, including transparent objects and objects that are overlapped by transparent objects. The highlighted objects will be affected past the flattening process—their strokes or patterns will be expanded, portions of them may get rasterized, and so on.

Affected Linked EPS Files (Illustrator only)

Highlights all linked EPS files that are affected by transparency.

Affected Graphics (InDesign only)

Highlights all placed content affected by transparency or transparency furnishings. This option is useful for service providers who demand to see graphics that require attending to impress properly.

Expanded Patterns (Illustrator and Acrobat)

Highlights all patterns that will exist expanded if involved in transparency.

Outlined Strokes

Highlights all strokes that will be outlined if involved in transparency or because Convert All Strokes To Outlines is selected.

Outlined Text (Illustrator and InDesign)

Highlights all text that will exist outlined if involved in transparency or because Catechumen All Text To Outlines is selected.

notation: In the final output, outlined strokes and text may appear slightly dissimilar from native ones, especially very thin strokes and very small text. Nevertheless, the Flattener Preview doesn't highlight this altered appearance.

Raster-Fill Text And Strokes (InDesign only)

Highlights text and strokes that take rasterized fills as a result of flattening.

All Rasterized Regions (Illustrator and InDesign)

Highlights objects and intersections of objects that will be rasterized because there is no other mode of representing them in PostScript or because they are more than circuitous than the threshold specified past the Rasters/Vectors slider. For case, the intersection of two transparent gradients volition always exist rasterized, even if the Rasters/Vectors value is 100. The All Rasterized Regions option besides shows raster graphics (such as Photoshop files) involved in transparency, and raster effects such every bit drop shadows and feathers. Note that this option takes longer to process than the others.

Transparency Flattener Preset options

Proper name/Preset

Specifies the name of the preset. Depending on the dialog box, you can type a proper noun in the Name text box or accept the default. You lot can enter the name of an existing preset to edit that preset. Nonetheless, you can't edit the default presets.

Raster/Vector balance

Specifies the amount of vector information that volition be preserved. College settings preserve more vector objects, while lower settings rasterize more vector objects; intermediate settings preserve simple areas in vector form and rasterize complex ones. Select the lowest setting to rasterize all the artwork.

Note: The corporeality of rasterization that occurs depends on the complexity of the page and the types of overlapping objects.

Line Fine art And Text Resolution

Rasterizes all objects, including images, vector artwork, text, and gradients, to the specified resolution. Acrobat and InDesign permit a maximum of 9600 pixels per inch (ppi) for line art, and 1200 ppi for slope mesh. Illustrator allows a maximum of 9600 ppi for both line art and slope mesh. The resolution affects the precision of intersections when flattened. Line Fine art and Text Resolution should mostly be set to 600‑1200 to provide loftier-quality rasterization, especially on serif or pocket-sized point sized type.

Gradient And Mesh Resolution

Specifies the resolution for gradients and Illustrator mesh objects rasterized as a upshot of flattening, from 72 to 2400 ppi. The resolution affects the precision of intersections when flattened. Gradient and mesh resolution should more often than not exist gear up between 150 and 300 ppi, because the quality of the gradients, driblet shadows, and feathers do not improve with higher resolutions, but printing fourth dimension and file size increase.

Convert All Text To Outlines

Converts all type objects (point type, surface area type, and path type) to outlines and discards all type glyph data on pages containing transparency. This option ensures that the width of text stays consistent during flattening. Note that enabling this choice volition cause small fonts to appear slightly thicker when viewed in Acrobat or printed on depression-resolution desktop printers. Information technology doesn't affect the quality of the blazon printed on high-resolution printers or imagesetters.

Convert All Strokes To Outlines

Converts all strokes to simple filled paths on pages containing transparency. This option ensures that the width of strokes stays consequent during flattening. Annotation that enabling this option causes sparse strokes to appear slightly thicker and may degrade flattening functioning.

Prune Circuitous Regions

Ensures that the boundaries betwixt vector artwork and rasterized artwork fall forth object paths. This option reduces stitching artifacts that result when part of an object is rasterized while another office of the object remains in vector form. Notwithstanding, selecting this option may upshot in paths that are too complex for the printer to handle.

note: Some print drivers process raster and vector art differently, sometimes resulting in color stitching. You may exist able to minimize stitching problems past disabling some print-driver specific colour-management settings. These settings vary with each printer, so run into the documentation that came with your printer for details.

Stitching, where rasters and vectors meet

Stitching, where rasters and vectors see.

(Illustrator only) Select Preserve Alpha Transparency (Flatten Transparency dialog box only)

Preserves the overall opacity of flattened objects. With this choice, blending modes and overprints are lost, but their appearance is retained within the processed artwork, along with the level of alpha transparency (as when you rasterize artwork using a transparent background). Preserve Alpha Transparency can be useful if you are exporting to SWF or SVG, since both of these formats support alpha transparency.

(Illustrator merely) Select Preserve Spot Colors And Overprints (Flatten Transparency dialog box only)

Generally preserves spot colors. Information technology besides preserves overprinting for objects that aren't involved in transparency. Select this pick when printing separations if the document contains spot colors and overprinted objects. Deselect this option when saving files for use in page-layout applications. With this option selected, overprinted areas that interact with transparency are flattened, while overprinting in other areas is preserved. The results are unpredictable when the file is output from a page-layout application.

Preserve Overprint (Acrobat simply)

Blends the color of transparent artwork with the background color to create an overprint event.

Preview which areas of artwork volition exist flattened

Employ the preview options in the Flattener Preview to highlight areas that are afflicted past flattening. You can apply this colour-coded information to conform flattening options.

The Flattener Preview is not intended for precise previewing of spot colors, overprints, and blending modes. Instead, use Overprint Preview way for those purposes.

  1. Brandish the Flattener Preview panel (or dialog box):

    • In Illustrator, choose Window > Flattener Preview.

    • In Acrobat, choose Tools > Impress Production > Flattener Preview.

    • In InDesign, choose Window > Output > Flattener Preview.

  2. From the Highlight card, choose the kind of areas yous desire to highlight. The availability of options depends on the content of the artwork.

  3. Select the flattening settings you want to use: Either choose a preset or, if available, set specific options.

    (Illustrator) If the flattening settings aren't visible, select Show Options from the panel menu to display them.

  4. If the artwork contains overprinted objects that interact with transparent objects, in Illustrator, select an choice from the Overprints carte. Y'all can preserve, simulate, or discard overprints. In Acrobat, choose Preserve Overprint to alloy the color of transparent artwork with the background color to create an overprint effect.

  5. At any fourth dimension, click Refresh to display a fresh preview version based on your settings. Depending on the complexity of the artwork, y'all may demand to wait a few seconds for the preview image to appear. In InDesign, you lot can also cull Auto Refresh Highlight.

    In Illustrator and Acrobat, to magnify the preview, click in the preview area. To zoom out, Alt-click/Option-click in the preview area. To pan the preview, hold down the spacebar and elevate in the preview expanse.

Flattener Preview panel overview

You utilize the preview options in the Flattener Preview console to highlight the areas affected by flattening artwork. Y'all can utilise this information to adjust the flattening options, and even use the panel to save flattener presets. To display the Flattener Preview panel, choose Window > Flattener Preview.

Flattener Preview panel

Flattener Preview panel

A. Panel carteB. Refresh buttonC. Highlight menuD. Overprint menuE. Transparency flattening settingsF. Preview area

Yous can control the speed and quality of the preview image past selecting an selection from the panel menu. Select Quick Preview to compute the quickest preview; select Detailed Preview to add the option All Rasterized Regions to the Highlight pop‑upwardly menu (this option is more performance-intensive to compute).

Keep in mind that the Flattener Preview panel is not intended for precise previewing of spot colors, overprints, blending modes, and image resolution. Use Overprint Preview mode in Illustrator to preview spot colors, overprints, and blending modes as they will announced when output.

Most transparency flattener presets

If you regularly print or export documents that incorporate transparency, you tin can automate the flattening procedure by saving flattening settings in a transparency flattener preset. You can so apply these settings for print output equally well equally for saving and exporting files to PDF 1.3 (Acrobat 4.0) and EPS and PostScript formats. In add-on, in Illustrator you can utilize them when saving files to earlier versions of Illustrator or when copying to the clipboard; in Acrobat, you lot can also apply them when optimizing PDFs.

These settings also control how flattening occurs when you export to formats that don't back up transparency.

You can choose a flattener preset in the Avant-garde console of the Print dialog box or of the format-specific dialog box that appears later the initial Consign or Salve As dialog box. You can create your ain flattener presets or cull from the default options provided with the software. The settings of each of these defaults are designed to match the quality and speed of the flattening with an appropriate resolution for rasterized transparent areas, depending on the document'southward intended use:

High Resolution

is for final press output and for high-quality proofs, such every bit separations-based color proofs.

Medium Resolution

is for desktop proofs and print-on-demand documents that volition be printed on PostScript color printers.

Depression Resolution

is for quick proofs that will be printed on blackness-and-white desktop printers and for documents that will exist published on the web or exported to SVG.

Create or edit a transparency flattener preset

Y'all tin can save transparency flattener presets in a separate file, making it easy to back them up or to make them available to your service providers, clients, or others in your workgroup. In InDesign, transparency flattener preset files take an .flst extension.

  1. Choose Edit > Transparency Flattener Presets.

    • To create a new preset, click New.

    • To base a preset on a predefined preset, select ane in the listing and click New.

    • To edit an existing preset, select the preset and click Edit.

    You can't edit the default flattener presets.

  2. Click OK to render to the Transparency Flattener Presets dialog box, and click OK once again.

Consign and import a custom transparency flattener preset

You can export and import transparency flattener presets in order to share them with your service providers, your clients, or others in your workgroup.

  1. Cull Edit > Transparency Flattener Presets.

  2. Select a preset in the list.

    • To export a preset to a separate file, click Save (InDesign) or Export (Illustrator), specify a name and location, and and so click Save.

      Consider saving the preset outside of the application's preferences folder. That mode, it won't be lost if you lot delete your preferences.

    • To import presets from a file, click Load (InDesign) or Import (Illustrator). Locate and select the file containing the preset you want to load, and then click Open.

Rename or delete a custom transparency flattener preset

  1. Choose Edit > Transparency Flattener Presets.

  2. Select a preset in the list.

    • To rename an existing preset, click Edit, type a new proper noun, and then click OK.

    • To delete a preset, click Delete, and and then click OK to confirm the deletion.

      annotation: Y'all cannot delete the default presets.

Flatten transparency for individual objects

The Flatten Transparency control lets you see what your artwork volition expect like when flattened. For case, you might apply this command before saving the file in SWF (Flash) format or if yous are having problems press legacy art where transparency may be the culprit.

  1. Choose Object > Flatten Transparency.

  2. Select the flattening settings you want to utilize, either by choosing a preset or setting specific options.

  3. To save the flattening settings for employ with other objects and documents in the current session, click Relieve Preset. If you want to create a permanent preset, choose Edit > Transparency Flattener Presets instead.

Rasterize all artwork during printing

When you lot print to a low-resolution or not-PostScript printer, such equally a desktop inkjet printer, yous tin choose to rasterize all artwork during printing. This option is useful when press documents that contain complex objects (such equally objects with smooth shading or gradients) considering information technology reduces the possibility of errors.

  1. Select Advanced on the left side of the Print dialog box.

  2. This option is simply available if the printer driver for the selected printer supports bitmap printing.

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Source: https://helpx.adobe.com/ca/illustrator/using/printing-saving-transparent-artwork.html

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