Adobe 65023809 Printing Guide - Page 65
Vector Text, Shape Layers, Vector Masks, a Photoshop PDF.
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the life of the image; text can be edited with the Type tool, and vector shapes can be edited with the Pen and selection tools. Since such content has no inherent resolution, it can be scaled and rotated within Photoshop without losing fidelity. However, some special handling is required to ensure that such content prints as intended. Vector Text: The Horizontal and Vertical Type tools are used to create vector text in Photoshop. Like text in Illustrator or InDesign, such text is fully editable-content, color, size, and spacing can be changed at any time, provided that the text remains true text. If the text is rasterized (Layer > Rasterize > Type), the text becomes pixels and such editability is lost. Note that the Type Mask tools do not create vector text; they let you type pixel-based characters that instantly become active selections. The appearance of vector text in Photoshop is a bit misleading; even though the text is clearly not pixels-it's fully editable-it appears rasterized. If the image is printed directly from Photoshop, the edges of text will be defined at the resolution of the underlying image, unless the image is printed to a PostScript printer and Include Vector Data is checked in the print dialog. (Text will be rasterized if the image is printed to a non-PostScript device, such as an inkjet printer, even if Include Vector Data is checked.) If a Photoshop .psd file containing text is placed into Illustrator or InDesign, the text will image at the resolution of the placed image. However, if the file is saved as a Photoshop PDF, the text in the image will print as crisp, vector text if the Photoshop PDF is placed in Illustrator or InDesign. Vector Text in Photoshop Viewed in Photoshop (left), the text appears rasterized. It will image as pixels if printed directly from Photoshop, unless Include Vector Data is checked in the print dialog (and the printer is a PostScript device). But if the file is saved as a Photoshop PDF (right), text is crisp when viewed in Acrobat, and prints as vectors if placed into an InDesign or Illustrator document, or if printed directly from Acrobat. Shape Layers: To create a Shape Layer, choose a vector drawing tool, such as the Pen tool, set the paths behavior in the Options bar to Shape Layer ( ), and select a foreground color. Use the Pen tools and the geometric tools (Rectangle, Ellipse, Custom Shape tool, and so on) to create what are essentially vector masks for a layer filled with color. The vector shapes can be edited with the selection tools and modified with the Add/Delete Anchor Point tools. The rules for imaging Shape Layers are the same as for vector text: to ensure crisp, vector edges, save the file as a Photoshop PDF. Shape Layer Pixel Fill Paths Shape Layers Created with vector drawing tools such as the Pen tool and Custom Shape tool, Shape Layers are essentially sheets of color with vector masks. This image has three shape layers; note that each Shape Layer consists of a color component and a vector mask component, which can be edited independently. Vector Masks: Very similar to Layer Masks, Vector Masks are created with vector tools such as the Pen tool. After a vector shape is created, the user chooses Layer > Vector Mask > Current Adobe Creative Suite 4 Printing Guide 63
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