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Kristina2016-07-03 19:52:28
Design
Kristina, 2016-07-03 19:52:28

What or on what to draw pictures for further use on souvenirs (magnets, clothes, waste paper, etc.)?

I came across a project, I need an artist to create souvenirs. So the question arose, how does the process from the picture in the brain to the result take place?

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4 answer(s)
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Pavel Designer, 2016-07-03
@Kris_T

Tools (In what or on what) depend directly on:
In general, vector graphics are more commonly used. handy for scaling when printing. Accordingly, it is necessary to create layouts in a vector editor (from the most famous paid Adobe Illustrator and CorelDRAW to less well-known, free and with less wide functionality). The specific tool should be chosen by the designer. it is he who will work on the creation.
Raster graphics are also used (more often for more realistic and photo images). There are also many graphic editors here: Adobe Photoshop is the most famous, but there are also many products from other manufacturers. The choice of a particular one also relies on the designer. you (the manager or the customer) care about the result, not the file format.
It is good practice to ask the print shop (or factory) for file requirements in advance .. This will eliminate any possible problems with the formats and technical features of the layouts for manufacturing. 2016 is in the yard, but I still don't understand why no one does this. If the printing house has a prepress department (and good and competent offices have it, I used to work in one myself), then the issues of conformity of layouts to the requirements are no longer so relevant. they themselves will lead to the desired form.
And from the picture in the brain to the result, the process is led by simple workers. The client sets a task, the designer solves it and embodies the ideas in the layout, then the layouts are prepared for production and the printing house / factory produces the necessary products. Everything is simple)))

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ipswitch, 2016-07-03
@ipswitch

It is better to clarify what they want from you, start with a question - raster or vector. After that, there will already be a certain freedom with the choice of tools.
If printing on T-shirts or magnets, they often require a raster. Actually, you can draw in anything, including in a vector, then simply rasterize it to the specified size.
Of the good programs offhand, I’ll give Paint Tool SAI (a small mega-thing), Corel Painter (not to be confused with DRAW), but there are lovers of painting directly in Photoshop.

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ThunderCat, 2016-07-03
@ThunderCat

In reality - photoshop and corel / illustrator. It's just that these are 2 different directions - a raster and a vector. Not every designer can do both at the same time.
If silk-screen printing is basically a vector, 70% of silk-screeners love korel and do not recognize anything else (judging by my swamp), almost everyone accepts tipuha for circulation, but prefer typhus in tsmik.
If you have more specific questions - write - I'm doing this, I won't be able to print, because I'm tired of taking it out) but I can easily advise)

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Sergey, 2016-07-03
@gangstarcj

The picture in the brain - the picture in the vector - the picture on a tangible medium.
What else can be? The printer himself adjusts the size to the media or blanks are made with the desired dimensions

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