General tips on using the Poster printer can be found here, including instructions on how to set up your laptop to print to the poster printer. Software options are described below.
Take care to note the size limitation of our poster printer: we can only print posters 42“ wide at the moment, with a recommended margin of 0.5”. Given the usual AAS space limitation of 44“ by 44”, this means that the maximum usable area of a AAS poster wil be 41“ by 43”. If you make your poster two inches shorter, you get a 1:1 aspect ratio with a poster content area that's 41“ by 41” (that way, you also don't have to worry about printing your poster landscape or portrait).
In addition, the poster printer appears to want to have at least an inch of blank space before it starts printing any ink, so one of the 42“ sides of your poster will be printed with that buffer. (If you have a blank margin, it counts toward that buffer, so if you use half-inch margins, it will appear that one side of your poster comes out with a margin of 1”.) You might want to factor this into your layout. Of course, there's nothing stopping you from trimming the padding area off of your poster once it's printed.
Note that Keynote will insert a white margin around your poster when you go to print it, so you don't need to put a border around things when designing your poster. You can put objects right up to the very edge of the slide and they will still print OK.
(These instructions work for Microsoft Office 2004 on Mac OSX 10.4 (Tiger). Other versions of Powerpoint may differ.)
A sure-fire method for printing posters made in Powerpoint is to save your file as a PDF, then print.
Note: OpenOffice just seems to get worse and worse; if you don't need much hand-holding, it may be worthwhile to try making your poster using the program Scribus, described in the next section. Also, due to boring politics your office suite may now be called LibreOffice instead of OpenOffice. For now, they're effectively identical.
You can make print-quality posters using entirely Free software, embedding EPS figures natively and images at high resolution. These instructions have been tested on recent Fedora distributions with OpenOffice 3. They also worked on OpenOffice 2.4 last year. They should work with any non-ancient Linux distribution and OpenOffice > 2.4, but, as always in Linux-land, your mileage may vary. These instructions are still a work in progress.
As in the above examples, we'll assume that you're creating your poster in a PowerPoint-type program. In Linux, the closest analogue is OpenOffice Impress.
Format > Page…
in the menus. The paper format will be User, and your dimensions will be something like 36“ by 43” with margins of 0.5“ all around. Set the page orientation to Portrait if your poster will indeed by taller than it is wide. If there is no “User” page format available, you need a newer version of OpenOffice.Insert > Picture > From File…
. Your EPS images will look crappy, but don't worry. That's just the low-quality preview.File > Print …
Print to File
destination.PostScript
Properties
tab and change the paper size to “ARCH E” and the orientation to match the orientation of your poster.Properties
button and change the paper size to “ARCH E” and the orientation to match the orientation of your poster.poster.ps
.ps2pdf
. Run ps2pdf -sPAPERSIZE=archE -dProcessColorModel=/DeviceCMYK -dPDFSETTINGS=/prepress -dColorImageFilter=/FlateEncode poster.ps poster.pdf
. These command-line options are pretty empirically based and are probably wanky in terms of the output quality. The documentation for ps2pdf (here for version 8.63) explains them a bit more, with the settings emulating the options described in Adobe's PDF Creation Settings documentation.File > Export to PDF …
menu option. However, it replaces embedded EPS figures with their previews, which gives completely unacceptable output. This is is OpenOffice.org issue #14163 and it has remained unfixed for six years.poster
.Scribus is an open-source desktop publishing (DTP) program that runs on Windows, Mac, and Linux. It seems promising for poster-making, since it supports nice things like linked text boxes, and it's oriented around producing maximal-quality PDF output, which is perfect for posters. If anyone tries making posters with it, a summary of helpful hints would be great.
Some poster design resources:
The poster printer is a 42-inch HP DesignJet 5500 DS. A large and poorly-formatted user manual on the HP website can be found here.
Resolution. According to the docs, in the highest-quality mode it outputs 600×600 DPI; in the lower modes, it does 300×300. If the “Enhanced IQ” mode is enabled, you can get 1200×600 DPI.
Colors. It is probably not feasible to get really accurate color reproduction in posters – it's unlikely that anyone here has a colorimetrically calibrated monitor. The printer manual has a good deal of information on accurate color calibration if anyone is interested in this topic.