ksharp
02-08-2005, 03:39 PM
I am a DTP relic (dating back to the early 90s) who can no longer be referred to as a "graphic designer", since all creative juices have long since been drained from me inner being. For the past 7 years I have worked in-house for professional service organizations. A growing frustration I have is with the staff members who request artwork from me. Since everyone is a graphic artist--tools of their trade being MS Word, clipart library, Google images and their expert use of "cut & paste"--I have been reduced to the supplier of logos. Unfortunately, even with this simple task my qualifications are questioned daily when I e-mail the requesting party an eps logo or a tiff image. They "can not open the file." In the world of MS Word users, the Insert>Picture is not a function normally used. Instead users copy low-res jpegs and gifs from the web and other Word docs and past them over-and-over into new Word docs. Then they print their poor quality graphics--often proportionately distorted--to the firm's new, expensive 1200+ dpi, postscript printers.
Now I don't expect that this practice will change amongst these self-proclaimed techies, but for my own sanity I would love to be able to reference some posted articles authored by industry professionals which explain best practices for graphics and the "why" behind them. Can anyone direct me to some published works which briefly describe the "how" and "why" in the language of a Microsoft/PC user?
Now I don't expect that this practice will change amongst these self-proclaimed techies, but for my own sanity I would love to be able to reference some posted articles authored by industry professionals which explain best practices for graphics and the "why" behind them. Can anyone direct me to some published works which briefly describe the "how" and "why" in the language of a Microsoft/PC user?