Good resolution for a sticker? [duplicate]

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












1
















This question already has an answer here:



  • I need to print an image at a certain size. What dimensions and resolution should I use?

    2 answers



I'm quite a newbie to designing.



Do you think this image has a good enough resolution for printing a 50 x 50 mm sticker?



enter image description here



Link to file










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marked as duplicate by Emilie Jan 17 at 15:50


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 4





    Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

    – Tyzoid
    Jan 15 at 22:32







  • 4





    Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

    – Scott
    Jan 15 at 22:56







  • 2





    As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

    – Aaron Lavers
    Jan 16 at 4:24











  • @Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

    – droidbot
    Jan 16 at 8:28











  • Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

    – Emilie
    Jan 17 at 15:46















1
















This question already has an answer here:



  • I need to print an image at a certain size. What dimensions and resolution should I use?

    2 answers



I'm quite a newbie to designing.



Do you think this image has a good enough resolution for printing a 50 x 50 mm sticker?



enter image description here



Link to file










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by Emilie Jan 17 at 15:50


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • 4





    Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

    – Tyzoid
    Jan 15 at 22:32







  • 4





    Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

    – Scott
    Jan 15 at 22:56







  • 2





    As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

    – Aaron Lavers
    Jan 16 at 4:24











  • @Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

    – droidbot
    Jan 16 at 8:28











  • Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

    – Emilie
    Jan 17 at 15:46













1












1








1









This question already has an answer here:



  • I need to print an image at a certain size. What dimensions and resolution should I use?

    2 answers



I'm quite a newbie to designing.



Do you think this image has a good enough resolution for printing a 50 x 50 mm sticker?



enter image description here



Link to file










share|improve this question

















This question already has an answer here:



  • I need to print an image at a certain size. What dimensions and resolution should I use?

    2 answers



I'm quite a newbie to designing.



Do you think this image has a good enough resolution for printing a 50 x 50 mm sticker?



enter image description here



Link to file





This question already has an answer here:



  • I need to print an image at a certain size. What dimensions and resolution should I use?

    2 answers







print-design






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 15 at 19:48









Danielillo

21.6k13275




21.6k13275










asked Jan 15 at 19:45









user131901user131901

91




91




marked as duplicate by Emilie Jan 17 at 15:50


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









marked as duplicate by Emilie Jan 17 at 15:50


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 4





    Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

    – Tyzoid
    Jan 15 at 22:32







  • 4





    Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

    – Scott
    Jan 15 at 22:56







  • 2





    As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

    – Aaron Lavers
    Jan 16 at 4:24











  • @Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

    – droidbot
    Jan 16 at 8:28











  • Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

    – Emilie
    Jan 17 at 15:46












  • 4





    Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

    – Tyzoid
    Jan 15 at 22:32







  • 4





    Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

    – Scott
    Jan 15 at 22:56







  • 2





    As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

    – Aaron Lavers
    Jan 16 at 4:24











  • @Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

    – droidbot
    Jan 16 at 8:28











  • Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

    – Emilie
    Jan 17 at 15:46







4




4





Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

– Tyzoid
Jan 15 at 22:32






Keep in mind that the thin font might be difficult to read at small sizes, and that many stickers are meant to be read from a distance (think bumper stickers / laptop stickers). Others, like labels, might be fine smaller.

– Tyzoid
Jan 15 at 22:32





4




4





Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

– Scott
Jan 15 at 22:56






Also be aware that light grey grid will be difficult to maintain or may be lost. Anything less than a 5% screen of an ink can be "iffy" on press. It takes a quality print house to maintain screens under 5%. And an exceptional print house to maintain a 1% or 2% screen.

– Scott
Jan 15 at 22:56





2




2





As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

– Aaron Lavers
Jan 16 at 4:24





As an ex-pre-press operator, I'd have to ask why you don't just send the file through as a vector in a .pdf / .eps file?

– Aaron Lavers
Jan 16 at 4:24













@Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

– droidbot
Jan 16 at 8:28





@Aaron.. yes I'll be sending as a pdf. But used jpg here for easy reference. Thanks for all the tips guys.

– droidbot
Jan 16 at 8:28













Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

– Emilie
Jan 17 at 15:46





Resolution is not your issue here if you are sending vectors. You will likely run into issues because of the halftone (lpi) caused by the thin and light elements. IMO your image probably isn't suitable for printing, but for reasons other than the resoluion.

– Emilie
Jan 17 at 15:46










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















6














Of course yes.



Your image is 50 x 50 cm! at 72 PPI



50 x 50 cm



Converted to 300 PPI which is an optimal resolution, the final size is 12 x 12 cm



12 x 12 cm



At 50 x 50 mm, the final resolution is more than 730 PPI



50 x 50 mm






share|improve this answer































    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    6














    Of course yes.



    Your image is 50 x 50 cm! at 72 PPI



    50 x 50 cm



    Converted to 300 PPI which is an optimal resolution, the final size is 12 x 12 cm



    12 x 12 cm



    At 50 x 50 mm, the final resolution is more than 730 PPI



    50 x 50 mm






    share|improve this answer





























      6














      Of course yes.



      Your image is 50 x 50 cm! at 72 PPI



      50 x 50 cm



      Converted to 300 PPI which is an optimal resolution, the final size is 12 x 12 cm



      12 x 12 cm



      At 50 x 50 mm, the final resolution is more than 730 PPI



      50 x 50 mm






      share|improve this answer



























        6












        6








        6







        Of course yes.



        Your image is 50 x 50 cm! at 72 PPI



        50 x 50 cm



        Converted to 300 PPI which is an optimal resolution, the final size is 12 x 12 cm



        12 x 12 cm



        At 50 x 50 mm, the final resolution is more than 730 PPI



        50 x 50 mm






        share|improve this answer















        Of course yes.



        Your image is 50 x 50 cm! at 72 PPI



        50 x 50 cm



        Converted to 300 PPI which is an optimal resolution, the final size is 12 x 12 cm



        12 x 12 cm



        At 50 x 50 mm, the final resolution is more than 730 PPI



        50 x 50 mm







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jan 15 at 22:35

























        answered Jan 15 at 19:53









        DanielilloDanielillo

        21.6k13275




        21.6k13275












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