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Hi Guys, please I really need your help on this one, my job is on the line.
When I design images that are below 1000px and export to jpg or PNG, it becomes a bit hazy on the edges. The type and outline edges don't come out very sharp. It doesn't have a crisp outline. I've searched everywhere without solution to this. I've also used all export options on JPG, PNG, PNG-24 including save for web legacy with Type optimization selected. I've also made sure the works are pixel perfect, I'm empty with ideas.
Can anyone help me figure out what the problem is please? Here are two of the images in 720px by 300px : Dropbox - Constant-confusion.png - Simplify your life and Dropbox - Grow your staff-Old.png - Simplify your life
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Your image is 720 x 300 px and looks correct when displayed at 100% view.
When you zoom in stuff looks bad and always will
Save for web you gives you more options such as type optimized.
Otherwise you need to make your type larger, use more pixels if you are allowed to make the web banner larger.
Other than that make sure align to pixel grid is on.
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Hi MikeGondek, thanks so much for the explanations, however, I've done all those earlier and my images looks okay to me. I've tried to make my boss understand but she's still not satisfied.
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Nedez schrieb
I've tried to make my boss understand but she's still not satisfied.
She won't get better results anywhere.
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You will not get a crisp line in a jpg, it's a pixel image. What you are looking at in Illustrator is vector and doesn't have pixels until you save it as something else. The jpg will always have fuzzy edges compared to the Illustrator file.
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I took a look at your images, the text is blurry and doesn't look right in the browser, but when I download them and open them in PS they look fine.
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melissapiccone what do you think could cause that?
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i have no idea what your environment is … or what your expectations are … i ‘surmise’ based on what you state. yes, you uploaded two *.png images … you could have also uploaded the original *.ai images for comparison. some elements in illustrator generate raster images … even in their native state.
if your intent is to host the image on a webpage … and you wish to retain certain regions that are ‘transparent’ … you’d save as gif or png or svg. gif and png are rasters(made of pixels) … svg is vector. gif will create an undesirable ‘halo/fringe/alias’ around the transparent areas. transparent png has no halos … and is honored by almost all browsers. svg(intended for one/two dimensional images) is not honored by all browsers. additionally, gif images contain only 256 colors.
in illustrator, when exporting from vector to jpg/gif/png/psd/etc … this protocol rasterizes the vector image. a small box appears, asking the dpi/ppi-resolution you want … normal webpage is 72dpi. theoretically, you could save it with higher resolution … but it won’t look any better when displayed on a webpage … also, the higher dpi means add'l bandwidth. if printing … line-art can be rendered to 1200dpi to help retain crispness.
what do majority of companies go with … hard to say, really. many webpages with logos are either jpg or png. i prefer transparencies … so i go with png … as, png have many benefits when designing websites. the normal illustrator (artist) creates a ‘safe’ read-only vector … thereby, rendering different options from that … webpage would be png … anything printed would be vector.
you always want to save the original vector in a remote location … in case things go awry. once a year open/save that file to a new location. why? magnetic bytes will eventually lose their charge. never use a usb-drive for this … they are not a dependable medium and may fail tomorrow. similarly, never trust an ssd-drive for same reason.
your boss pulls you into her office on friday … telling you the company president wants to host a billboard with advertisement. all you gotta’ do is copy/burn that original vector to a cd and give it to the sign-shop to silkscreen. vectors will always retain their sharpness … because they are actually mathematical formulae instead of pixels.
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As to why it might look different in the browser - no idea. I'm just viewing it from Dropbox. However... if it's in a webpage and the size is different for the display from the actual size of the image, it will look horrible. Make sure the file is the exact size - pixel dimensions - you want it to display.
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Have you tried using the asset export window in Illustrator?
Another question, what will this file be used for? Web or Print?
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meganchi It's for web
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Have you tried turning on "Snap to Pixel" to make sure your artwork is aligned to a pixel grid like MikeGondek suggested previously?
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