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Thanks for the tip! Don't know how I did it, but the bounding box was wayyyy out there! I was able to save as a png just fine via Illustrator - I thought you had to export it thru PS (duh! - live & learn)
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Hello Kevanja,
I think you are using CS4 version. right?
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Ok this is weird, but I have to post it. Checking the Anti-alias check box when exporting causes the error. My file size was over 400 kb and I had done it the day before but I did some designs in between. So I figured that I must have made a huge change in the preferences then. My system is 2 years old but it's fully loaded and I keep it up to date and well optimized, so I knew it couldn't be my system. Oh it doesn't seem that the document raster effects settings have any bearings when it comes to the above mentioned. I'm using CS4.
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Bandit, your solution's perfect. I don't know quite why ant-aliasing would cause such a dramatic increase or memory usage (ostensibly, anyway), but oh well. Maybe it's just a bug, not actually associated to memory usage.
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Thanks Nxlimit I'm glad to have helped. I do think Its a bug also. However at the time, I was doing an illustration for a cover that was supposed to be 8-in x10-in funny enough, when I finished working on it over in Photoshop. I realized that it was actually 32-in x 30-in or something like that .
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I just encountered the same problem ("not enough memory to save file") when trying to export my .AI to .PSD. unchecking Anti-Alias when exporting was what worked for me. Using AICS4 exporting to PSCS4, AI file is 70MB, running Mac OS 10.5.8
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Bingo. Exactly correct! It's the anti-alias setting that causes it!
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Thanks! This solved my problem as well! no more errors.
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Thank you sir!
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from what I can tell when saving a PSD from Illustrator it starts at the very outer edge of the master artboard and sometimes gets tripped up and tries to save a file larger then the actual artboard you're working on...files that normally didn't save before have a better chance of saving if I used the "use artboards" checkbox in the first export dialog box, then choose the artboard number or all if it's just 1. The Anti-aliasing uses a higher memory requirement for the PSD export so the upper limit gets reached faster, but try to force the artboard to export option and see if that helps
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Ha! I've been experiencing this problem for so long and have tried so many solutions. FINALLY! Viking....I always missed the "use artboards" checkbox! I tried un-checking anti-aliasing, copying and pasting as smart objects into PS (which is not fun when it's complex), increasing my virtual memory, changing my scratch disks, etc. and it turns out AI has just always been trying to export huge artboards! Thank you sooo much. You have no idea!
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I'm having same problem trying to export AI to PSD with CS4.
Want to write layers at 300ppi, using artboards, unchecked 'anti-alias', AI file is only 1MB, just simple vectors with fill.
I have about 260GB free on scratch disk (partitioned) and 3GB of RAM.
Overall size of artwork is 1194mm x 2286 mm, but surely it can handle that size?!?!
I create much bigger PSD files, with more effects, and sure it is a bit slow but no problem really.
Eventually got it to work, but had to drop resolution to 150ppi (not happy about this, not enough for what I need to produce. Will have to resample in PS) and PSD file only ended up being 19MB!
How come Illustrator is so "space hungry"?
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No idea why it's so memory hungry, I was hoping CS5 would do the trick but it does the same thing as CS4. The only work around (total PIA but it works) is to save each layer as an EPS file and bring them into Photoshop at 300DPI or whatever resolution I need...bringing it in (almost always) respects the transparency but also crops to the extents of the objects of that layer which is usually smaller then the artboard so I create a layer (usually bottom at the bottom) that has an empty box with a 1 point stroke line the size of the artboard. Because I keep this layer always on and the eps files respect transparency I can then drag them over to a single photoshop file and line up a corner (if needed) to keep everything in place. Then marque the outer line and delete it from all layers (you can keep if you like). LIke I said a PIA but it does work for the ones I need at 300+DPI. Of corse if you don't need layers a single EPS file works too
There is probably a trick to have Photoshop use the entire artboard instead of cropping but the line thing works and isn't that big a deal on my end
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I'm glad I check here. I was trying to export an illustration to photoshop, and definitely uncheck anti-alias.Worked perfectly, although it didn't include my layers, so I'll try something else.
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This still doesn't often work for me exporting from CS5 to psd and I want antialiased layers. I have 12GB ram so that shouldn't be a problem, I think adobe need to sort this out.
Anyhow my current workaround is to copy each layer individually and paste as a smart object in photoshop, the bonus being they are still vector objects and can be scaled. Unfortunately you need to reposition the layers so not much good if you have many layers going on, but it works in lots of situations.
They really should be an option to export to psd with layers as smart objects for photoshop, come on Adobe!
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Another solution is to save your .ai file as a .pdf. Then either open or "place" the .pdf in Photoshop and let that application handle the rasterizing.
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Saving a PDF is a good solution; however, it doesn't include layers so you'll have a flat file much like rasterising an EPS file.
(I might be missing something with the import options though so if anyone knows how to import a layered PDF let me know)
carny_'s copy and paste solution is also a great workaround that seems to be working (although tedious with lots of layers )
with the only caveats being everything should be constrained to the working artboard and centered...when you paste in
Photoshop it wants to center that paste on the current document so if you have some asymmetrically balanced objects
(like objects in one corner) or something larger then the artboard but again unbalanced (hanging off one side) those layers
may not be in position in photoshop. A workaround is to include a "crop box" layer...a bottom most layer with just a stroked
box (no fill color) that is large enough to encompass your entire image...just have to remember to select that box with
every copy/paste . It does work though and worth the trouble for files too "large" to export normally...my biggest file
tested so far was a 15"x15" piece.