Artwork
Tips for designing your artwork for best results at the Resource Centre.
- Choosing the right printer
- Use the right program
- Save it in more than one format
- Margins and bleeds
- If your original is on paper
- Designing artwork for copyprinter printing
Which printer?
Design your artwork so that it is appropriate for the type of printing you are going to do. For example, there’s no point in using complex, colourful graphics if you are going to be printing in black & white, on a low resolution machine. If you are planning to print at the Resource Centre, and not sure about what printer to use and what design is appropriate, contact us.
Use the right program
Designing things like posters, flyers and newsletters is much easier if you use a desktop publishing program, rather than a word processing program. You have much more control over where things appear on the page in programs like Microsoft Publisher or Adobe Indesign than you do in Microsoft Word or Open Office Write. However, it’s no good trying to design your artwork in a program you don’t know how to use!
Our staff are happy to provide tips here and there, but we do not offer training and support with design work, so you do need to make sure that you design your printing in a program that you understand.
We have some blank templates in Microsoft Publisher which you can find on our computers at the Centre or download from the leaflets and stickers pages.
Community groups in Sussex are welcome to come and design their artwork in the Centre.
Computer use is free but if you would like to use a computer for a number of hours, it is advisable to book one. Contact us to do this. Have a look at our list of computer programs before you come, so that you know what you will want to use.
Save it as a PDF or JPEG and bring the original as well!
If you design your artwork at home, bring it to the Resource Centre as a JPEG or PDF file in case we don’t have the program or fonts that you have used. It is also a good idea to bring a version in the file type you designed it in (e.g. a Publisher, Photoshop or Word file) so that you can make changes to it here if you want to (and if we have the right program for you). There’s a list of the main software we have available on our computers and internet page.
Margins and bleeds
If you are printing on our copyprinters, there will be around 8mm blank around the edges of the page. Bear this in mind when designing your artwork – if it doesn’t have a margin, the edges could end up getting chopped off when you print it!
If you want your finished document to have colour right to the edge of the page, you can print it on SRA3 paper on our laser printer, then cut it down to size on our guillotine. To design your artwork for best results:
- Set the paper size to a custom size. It should be 6mm bigger than you want your finished document pages to be, in both directions. See the table below for dimension of standard paper sizes.
- Set margins at 3mm all around. Everything outside the margin will be cut off after printing.
- Keep all your important text and images at least 3mm inside the margins, to make sure they don’t get cut off by mistake.
- Make sure your background colour or image extends right to the edge of the page, to make sure there is no white edge showing when the document is cut to size.
Page sizes in mm are:
Paper size | Actual (finished) size in mm | Dimensions for artwork with bleed in mm |
---|---|---|
A4 | 210 x 297 | 216 x 303 |
A5 | 148.5 x 210 | 154.5 x 216 |
A6 | 105 x 148.5 | 111 x 154.5 |
You can send your artwork to us in the following formats:
- Any image file (eg .jpg, .png, .tif, .bmp) – make sure the image is high-resolution enough. One image per page. You want it to be at least 300 dpi at full size.
This is our preferred format, but if you can send your original document as well, that is ideal. - PDF – make sure you set it for high quality printing when you create your PDF
- Microsoft Word
- Microsoft Publisher
- Libre Office
- Adobe Indesign (but save it in a format that is compatible with version CS6)
- Adobe Photoshop (but save it in a format that is compatible with version CS6)
If your original is on paper…
Printing quality will always be better if you print directly from an electronic file. If you do need to bring your artwork on paper:
- Make sure it is not folded or creased.
- Make sure it is on white paper, even if you are planning to copy it onto coloured paper.
- If you can, bring copies that are single sided, even if you are going to produce double sided copies.
- If it contains lots of detailed images, you may get better quality by doing a high resolution scan to create an electronic file, and then printing from the scanned file. We can show you how to do this.
- Remember that the quality of the original determines the quality of the reproduction.
Designing artwork for copyprinter printing
General tips
- Leave a margin of at least 8mm around all the outside edges of your image.
- Don’t have huge areas of black or very dense images. These will come out grey rather than solid black, and tend to jam the machines.
- You will lose some contrast and resolution when you print. A complicated graphic with lots of photo images and overwriting can end up looking messy. Clear, fairly simple artwork reproduces best.
- Make sure your original artwork is on a white background.
- Finalise your artwork before cutting a stencil on the copyprinter. If you want to print out a copy to see how it looks on paper, use the laser printer.
Spot colour printing
Our copyprinters work by cutting a stencil which wraps round an ink drum. Wet ink then comes through this stencil onto the paper. One of our machines holds two drums at a time. One holds only one.
Spot colour printing on the two drum printer
You can use this machine if you want to print using red or green ink.
This machine has two drums in it, so it can put two different colours of ink on the paper at the same time. It is also able to understand which colour is which in your artwork, so you can bring one piece of artwork with, for example, black and red in it, and it will be able to work out which bits to print using black ink and which bits to print using red ink.
You can also bring your artwork as a paper original, with two colours in it.
Spot colour printing on the one drum printer
You will need to use this machine if you want to print using maroon ink.
To print in two colours on this machine, you need to put the paper through the machine twice. For example if you are printing in maroon and black, you will print the black bits first, then put the paper back through to print the maroon bits.
To use this machine, your artwork must be ‘colour separated’. One sheet of original artwork will contain everything to print in black, and another will have everything to print in maroon. A lot of desktop publishing and illustration programs will do this for you automatically. However, Microsoft Word and Publisher do not. To create colour-separated files in Word or Publisher, follow this process:
- Create a complete version, then save it (e.g. Poster Complete).
- Save a copy (Save As) and name it something like Poster Black.
- Change all the non-black bits of your document to white. You can change pictures to white by increasing their brightness setting to 100%. Then save this document again.
- Re-open the original complete document.
- Save another copy (Save As) and name it something like Poster Maroon.
- Change all the black bits to white and all the maroon bits to black (yes, you need to change the bits you want in colour to black at this stage). Save again.
When you are printing spot colour, remember that the machine will always print whatever colour ink is in the drum in the machine! To change the colour you need to change the drum – changing the colour of your original artwork won’t make any difference.
If you are printing from a paper original, all the pieces of original artwork should be in black, even if you are going to copy them in coloured ink.
you would need to supply two separate sheets of artwork like this:
Not too close!
Our machines are not accurate enough to deal with colours that are right next to each other – for example, a red square with a black line around it. The machine jigs things around slightly, so the black line or red box moves a couple of millimetres. The end result is messy – a red square with a black line that doesn’t fit snugly, but sometimes overlaps and sometimes leaves a slight margin.
To avoid this, only use colour for distinct headings, boxes or pictures. Make sure there are a few millimetres of space around them, so a small amount of jigging won’t spoil the overall effect.
Additional work and cost
It will cost you more to print in two colours, as there are two stencils and everything goes through the machine twice. This is true for each additional colour you use. For the same reasons it will take you longer to run the print job if you are using two or more colours.