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Hey there, once again I ask for your help.
Currently I am working on a project of few graphical panels 2,8m (9,18ft) to 1,3m (4,26ft) that have to be printed and attached on a side of a display booth. I was told to send the file in 300 ppi (which I doubt is needed for something as big as this print is due to the viewing distance, but they re-assured me that is what they need)
So if I follow these rules, the files created, even when flattened to a single layer, are 5GB+.
Questions - Is there a way to export/save as JPG with included CMYK picture profile? Or what other way should I save this file to send it to printer? Is .psb (the format that saves 4GB+ files) my only option?
Normally I was exporting files over Lightroom and set parameters as limited file size/PPI in there, but lightroom does not save in CMYK, and .tif that I would normally use for print jobs (flattened to one layer, converted to a printer´s picture profile) could not be used since it exceeds the 4GB file size limit of photoshop.
Thanks in advance for any help.
I was told to send the file in 300 ppi (which I doubt is needed for something as big as this print is due to the viewing distance, but they re-assured me that is what they need)
By @Zower
You're absolutely dead correct, and the person who told you this simply doesn't know what they're talking about. Printing services are full of customer relations people who know nothing about the technical side. Unfortunately, those are often the only people you can talk to, you don't get to the people who
...hi D.Fosse, Here's a PPI / viewing distance formula posted a while ago by DavesCM
it might require a bit more explanation.
I hope this helps
neil barstow, colourmanagement net - adobe forum volunteer - co-author: 'getting colour right'
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management
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I was told to send the file in 300 ppi (which I doubt is needed for something as big as this print is due to the viewing distance, but they re-assured me that is what they need)
By @Zower
You're absolutely dead correct, and the person who told you this simply doesn't know what they're talking about. Printing services are full of customer relations people who know nothing about the technical side. Unfortunately, those are often the only people you can talk to, you don't get to the people who actually do the printing.
PSD is limited to 2GB, TIFF to 4GB. Anything above that is strictly PSB.
But keep in mind that this is file size on disk. For jpeg, you can get around that with heavy compression. That will shrink the native file size down to anywhere beteen 1 and 10 %. It will obviously degrade the file in the process, making the 300ppi requirement even more meaningless.
So what ppi would you need for this? There is a formula for "standard distance" viewing that I can never remember. But even assuming you're supposed to go right up to it: Consider a computer screen, say a standard 27 inch at 2560 x 1440. That's about 110 ppi. How close would you have to go before you start seeing pixels? Just try that out for yourself. (the answer is...very close 😉 )
At specification, they're asking for 33 000 x 15 500 pixels. That's ridiculous. A good working rule of thumb is that anything above 15 000 pixels long side is most likely wasted, except in some very special circumstances (and this isn't one of them).
I'd settle for 120 here, maybe 150 if I felt it was important. But 300 - no way.
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hi D.Fosse, Here's a PPI / viewing distance formula posted a while ago by DavesCM
it might require a bit more explanation.
I hope this helps
neil barstow, colourmanagement net - adobe forum volunteer - co-author: 'getting colour right'
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management
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Thank you @D Fosse for detailed answer.
Thanks to @NB, colourmanagement net too for your input.
Appreciate the time you took to reply guys.
Have a good one
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@Zower thanks for that, I hope it helps you arrive at a good solution to your issue
I hope this helps
neil barstow, colourmanagement net - adobe forum volunteer - co-author: 'getting colour right'
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management
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Huge files won't print easily, either. Usually this type of graphic is printed on a wide format inkjet with a separate computer running RIP software, you'll just choke the RIP with gigantic files.