Every guide we've written about vector files — what they are, when you need them, and how we build clean, print-ready artwork from any source.
Vector artwork is the foundation almost every print and embroidery process depends on — a file built from scalable paths instead of pixels, so it can be resized from a business card to a billboard without losing quality. If you've ever been asked "can you send the vector version of your logo," this is the topic that explains why.
Below is our full collection of vector and artwork guides — from the basics of raster vs vector and vectorizing an old logo, to more specific topics like color separation for screen printing and Pantone color matching. If your only logo file is a blurry JPG from an old website, start here.
The most common file question in the print world, explained — and why it matters more than you think.
Read More →What actually happens when a designer "vectorizes" your logo — and why it matters for screen printing.
Read More →What to check in your logo file before sending it over, so nothing gets lost in translation.
Read More →How a multi-color design gets broken apart into individual screens for a clean, accurate print.
Read More →Line art takes a different approach than standard vectorizing — here's how the conversion actually works.
Read More →Sublimation handles full-color art differently — here's where vector files still matter.
Read More →Keeping your brand colors consistent across print and embroidery — and why they're never 100% identical.
Read More →Send us your design and get a free quote within the hour. Machine-ready files in 2–3 hours.