The worst is when I try resizing the image to fit smaller products, the image looks worse- slightly distorted at times and any outlines or sharp lines become jagged and blurry. The resolution of the images looks low and the fonts also appear blurry even when I try re-uploading the edited version of the same image with larger font sizes and it's no better. I'm also using AD for print on demand and even though I export high resolution PNGs dpi, when I upload my designs on t-shirts on Teespring and Redbubble, the images quality look quite poor as compared to other seller's T-shirts. Affinity designer is vector software but when any designs have a stroke/outline or line- the edges become pixelated when I change the orientation or rotation of the object or line. Oh wow, thanks Schmu for raising this as I having been having the same issue and was trying to figure out what I'm doing wrong. *Looking through other forum threads seems that a lot of other people are haveing the same problem with PNG don't see any thread where the problem was resolved (could this be a limitation of AD?). The last thing you mentioned - which I still need to try - is setting up my document using the physical dimensions of where it needs to be used - it's a screen that I don't yet have exact dimensions for I'm guessing its about 15 ft x 3 ft (457.2cm x 91.44cm) No visible difference once exported again using Nearest Neighbor I then selected the Linear option in case this made a difference (no visible difference once exported again). The Source and Dest graphs are also set with horizontal line at top. The aspect ratio for the PNG file I want is same as my AD doc setup (300圆0 pixels). With a size of like 25,4cm by 5,08cm your output will be 3000圆00 pixels. For resampling I always use 'nearest neighbour' so colours stay clean and unmixed. make sure the document setup is don't forget to scale the artwork as well.ģ in export persona when choosing PNG set the 'pixel format' to 'use document format'. This provides clean sharp edges.Ģ set your artboard to the real world output size in cm or inches. My suggestions would be, depending on your output (size)needs:ġ in AD check all layers and shapes: Layers > cogwheel > coverage map: make it a horizontal line at the top. In vector you won't see pixels but in PNG you will. Your artboard is set to 300圆0 pixels which amounts to 2,54cm x 0,51cm 300dpi.
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