Good artwork preparation helps custom box production move smoothly. Most printing issues happen because dielines, fonts, colors, or finishing layers are missing or unclear.
Preferred File Formats
Editable vector files are preferred for packaging artwork. Adobe Illustrator files, editable PDFs, or other vector formats make it easier to adjust dielines, check bleed, and separate finishing layers.
Important Artwork Requirements
- Use the final approved dieline
- Add bleed outside the cut line
- Keep text and logos away from fold and trim edges
- Outline fonts or include font files
- Use high-resolution images
- Mark foil, embossing, debossing, and spot UV as separate layers
CMYK vs. Pantone
CMYK is commonly used for full-color printing. Pantone colors are useful when brand color consistency is critical. If your packaging uses a brand blue, red, green, or metallic ink, Pantone matching may be worth discussing early.
Why the Dieline Matters
The dieline is the production map of the box. Artwork should be built on the final dieline so each panel, glue area, fold line, and opening direction is correct before printing.