I then went to Doc Setup and did an Upsample at 300 DPI, which didn't appear to take any time or change anything - because it was already 300 DPI(?) Then I exported the PDF (for print) at 400 DPI and chose Bicubic option, no rasterizing. I read some info from Affinity regarding "Upsampling" and info about the Bicubic export choice. I was confused by the Printer's rejection of the PDF, since this is more or less the same way I used to set up PhotoShop docs, and I had used lower res images in the past without the entire PDF being rejected as 72 DPI. When I exported I chose the PDF (for print) at 300 DPI, using the Bilinear default. The other layers contained limited text and a solid background color. All the images were reduced more than 50% from their imported sizes, so I thought the PNGs would still get by. Two of those were video screen captures and were 72 DPI PNGs, while the other was a 400 DPI photo. I had set the doc up as a 4圆 postcard with bleed (4.25 inches by 6.25 inches), and choose the default profile for CYMK instead of RGB color. A printer I have worked with for years to do postcards told me my PDF Export of a design in Affinity Photo was only 72 DPI. Affinity Photo is a tremendous alternative. Just want to say, after years of using PhotoShop, I was unable to afford upgrade subscriptions when I moved to MACOS High Sierra.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |