The department has a shared HP T1700 wide-format printer available to all Neuroscience Dept, Institute for Neuroscience, Center for Learning and Memory, and Waggoner Center faculty, staff and students.
Printing Restrictions
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- Paper size and type is currently limited to 42" rolls of Hi-Res gloss photo paper.
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Formatting Guidelines
- Set poster dimensions should be set to a height of 4236" or 3642" if you plan to cut off the excess (paper is 42")posters should be formatted .
- If possible, format posters with a vector graphic application such as Adobe Illustrator, and embed all images and fonts fully embedded.
- Full poster-sized
- PDF format is also suitable.
- Note: Microsoft PowerPoint is not a suitable format and
- cannot be scaled
- without distorting.
- PowerPoint is not meant for projection, not print graphics.
- Proof-read your poster before submitting for printing. We do not have the resources to re-print posters.finished posters
Submission & Printing Process
- Upload finished, ready to print should be uploaded posters to this dropbox: https://utexas.app.box.com/f/f7550bf19d23498aa6bbefbd485d24e2
- please make sure posters are fully proof-read before uploading. We do not have the resources to print multiple times per person
- once complete finished posters will be available in the CLM/Neuro office suite Pick up printed posters in NHB 2.504there
- Questions? Please contact Jason Goltz, goltz@austin.utexas.edu
Cost
- There is currently no fee associated with these printing services as long as costs are kept to a minimum.for poster printing questions please contact Jason Goltz, goltz@austin.utexas.edu
Printing Tips & Suggestions
- when placing Resize images resize them to 1x-2x the final print size. e.g. if an image you are embedding needs to be a 2" x 3" 150 dpi image, do not place a 8" x 10" 600 dpi image and then click and drag to shrink it down to size. Oversized images can create giant print files that take much the correct dimensions and resolution before placing in a poster file.
- Oversized images placed in a file and then resized to smaller dimensions can result in an oversized file that takes longer to upload, process and print.
- And resolution will
- be lost.
- For example, do not place
- a 8" x 10"
- When using a portion of an image for a figure make a new image file with that portion of the image cropped. Do not use masks. Masks can be unpredictable with multilayered files even if flattening.
- 600 dpi image in a poster file that needs to end up as 2" x 3" 150 dpi image.
- Likewise, undersized images placed in a file and resized to larger dimensions can print out as pixelated and grainy.
- Create a new image file when needing a portion of an existing image
- Crop image as needed and save as a new image file.
- Do not use masks, which can cause unpredictable results, even if images are flattened.
- Always create a new poster file.
- In other words, don't reuse a past template. Errors and unseen masks or elements that were remnants from previous posters can effect the printing of the
- new
- poster
- .