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Digital Lifestyle
Images, Graphic Design, and Digital Photography
Quark and Photoshop .eps files
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<blockquote data-quote="D3v1L80Y" data-source="post: 485350" data-attributes="member: 2960"><p>PS CS2 can save a duotone in a jpeg format, you don't need to save it as .eps.</p><p></p><p>Open the image in PS.</p><p>Change the mode to Grayscale.</p><p>Then change the mode to Duotone.</p><p>When you have your two colors set, change the mode back to RGB or CMYK (depending on where you plan on using it).</p><p>Save the image as a jpeg.</p><p></p><p>Unless I am missing something, that should work.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="D3v1L80Y, post: 485350, member: 2960"] PS CS2 can save a duotone in a jpeg format, you don't need to save it as .eps. Open the image in PS. Change the mode to Grayscale. Then change the mode to Duotone. When you have your two colors set, change the mode back to RGB or CMYK (depending on where you plan on using it). Save the image as a jpeg. Unless I am missing something, that should work. [/QUOTE]
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Quark and Photoshop .eps files
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