cje Posted September 11, 2021 Share Posted September 11, 2021 I'm still quite new to Affinity and learn to use it on new projects. When exporting a quite light project (3 page in designer, 4 Mb affinity file) to pdf (flatten/no layers/300dpi,70% compression) it uses very long time rendering and make a 10 Mb pdf file. First, using that long time for rendering was quite unusual to me (I'm running Affinity on a i7, 32 Gb Ram ThinkPad, Win10pro), and the file turned out too heavy. Is this an know issue or do I just need to fin tune the export more? Update: removing ICC profile and layers made the trick. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff Sean P Posted September 16, 2021 Staff Share Posted September 16, 2021 Hi cje, Could you attach a copy of your Designer document, the PDF settings you're using to export and also the resulting PDF files you're getting? However from what you've said it does sound like it might be a fairly large ICC profile you've used that was getting embedded to the PDF. Thanks, Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cje Posted September 25, 2021 Author Share Posted September 25, 2021 Hi Sean, I would gladly help you and try to find back to the original file, but I need an email or private place to upload the file. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff Sean P Posted September 27, 2021 Staff Share Posted September 27, 2021 Hi cje, I've created a link to our internal Dropbox where you can upload a copy of your file.https://www.dropbox.com/request/o6n1Q61yAwIVpDFYRtx6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cje Posted October 2, 2021 Author Share Posted October 2, 2021 Thank you. I've uploaded the file as cjeTest Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff Sean P Posted October 5, 2021 Staff Share Posted October 5, 2021 Thanks for the file - however I believe this is by design. Your design contains large areas of Layer Effects and when the whole document gets rasterised to 300dpi, the rasterised image has much larger pixel dimensions than the source document to maintain the 300dpi setting. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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