Importing eps, dcs, and autocad files, Importing eps files – Adobe Illustrator CS3 User Manual

Page 266

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ILLUSTRATOR CS3

User Guide

260

Art

Places the PDF only in the area defined by a rectangle that the author created as placeable artwork (for example,

clip art).

Crop

Places the PDF only in the area that is displayed or printed by Adobe Acrobat.

Trim

Identifies the place where the final produced page will be physically cut in the production process, if trim

marks are present.

Bleed

Places only the area that represents where all page content should be clipped, if a bleed area is present. This

information is useful if the page is being output in a production environment. Note that the printed page may include
page marks that fall outside the bleed area.

Media

Places the area that represents the physical paper size of the original PDF document (for example, the dimen-

sions of an A4 sheet of paper), including page marks.

See also

“Place (import) files” on page 253

Importing monotone, duotone, and tritone images from Adobe PDF files

When you import artwork from an Adobe PDF file, it’s possible to introduce data that you can’t create within
Illustrator. This is called non-native art and includes monotone, duotone, and tritone images. You can also generate
non-native art within Illustrator by using the Flatten Transparency command to preserve spot colors.

Illustrator’s ability to preserve non-native art is useful in many situations. For example, Illustrator maintains the spot
color information in linked PDF files when you output color separations.

By default, non-native art is labeled <Non-Native Art> in the Layers and Appearance panels. You can select, move,
save, and perform basic transformations (such as scaling, rotating, or skewing) on non-native art. However, you
cannot select and edit its individual components. In addition, you must rasterize non-native art before editing it with
the liquify tools.

To convert non-native art to an Illustrator object, choose Object > Rasterize.

See also

“Importing Adobe PDF files” on page 259

“Rasterize a vector object” on page 366

Importing EPS, DCS, and AutoCAD files

Importing EPS files

Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) is a popular file format for transferring vector artwork between applications. You can
bring artwork from EPS files into Illustrator using the Open command, the Place command, the Paste command,
and the drag-and-drop feature.

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