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Participant
April 25, 2011
Answered

PLACING Images in Illustrator documents and saving.

  • April 25, 2011
  • 1 reply
  • 36938 views

Is there any way to just embed pictures in an illustrator document, because I know when you PLACE (File> Place) them in, it creates a link, and if you accidently delete a pic or something it won't show up in your document you open.  My question is:  Is it possible once you place images in your document, to embed them permanantly without having them linked at all, yet still preserve editing capability?

I save out a lot of PDF's and sometimes the images are linked to the pdf's as well.  I always have (preserve illustrator editing capabilities) checked when I save out my PDF's in order to make changes regularly.  ANY HELP??

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    Correct answer Mike_Gondek10189183

    Gotcha, I guess what I'm talking about is that, if you link an image in an illustrator doc, then save out a pdf for that doc, delete the image you linked, then try to re-open the pdf you saved out, it will give you a missing link error.  So what I'm talking about is that, a pdf still recognizes your links after it's saved out, unless you actually go to the links panel and embed the image, then save out the pdf.


    If you open a .pdf in Illustrator you may get asked for a link depending on what pdf preset you use.

    Smallest file size - compresses & embeds the images

    Illustrator Default - both a link is created in the code and an image is embedded. If you open in Illustrator will look for the image, if you open in Acrobat will use the embedded image.

    Now if you have a .ai file open, save to pdf smallest file size, and with the file still open save back to .ai, the link is reestablished. The file then acts like a .ai file, none of that breaking up of text where kerned, etc happens. So if you ever accidentlayy save as a .pdf a way to recover without messing up the editability of your file is to save with the file open to .ai.

    1 reply

    Mike_Gondek10189183
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    April 25, 2011

    To embed images go to you links palette flyout menu and choose embed.

    Experienced Illustrator users usually do not embed because

    1. makes your illustrator files larger and slower.
    2. cannot keep track of resolution or color space
    3. they can keep track of their files without losing
    4. making edits later is a longer process
    5. overall control and management of image quality is better
    6. Embedding images on large projects increase the overall project file size, because you make a copy of the image within illustrator each time you embed.

    To edit embedded images, you need to copy from illustrator and paste them into photoshop. Problem is you do not know what original resulotion they are and you maybe upsampling the image or changing the colorspace/profile. If you still want to embed, you are better off , keeping an original image in your job folder, that you can edit in Photoshop, and then use the links palette in Illustrator to relink.

    stalsbeeAuthor
    Participant
    April 25, 2011

    Sounds good,  I always save out spec sheets in PDF format from Illustrator so, I was just wondering about the embed thing, but I completely agree with you about the effeciency of using link files and editablity factor!

    Do PDF's automatically embed your images though if they are linked?

    I normally send the spec sheets in PDF format by themselves because they get uploaded to our website that way, so I never really need to edit the pictures I include in them and I want to send them by themselves, not with a job folder and all.  Thanks for the info!  It helped a lot!

    stalsbeeAuthor
    Participant
    April 25, 2011

    Just did a test, actually PDF's don't automatically embed images when they're saved out.  Thanks for the help!