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For Wrap DesignersGuides7/6/20268 min read

The Print-Ready Wrap File Checklist: What Production Needs From Designers

The preflight checklist that stops reprints: scale, bleed, panel overlap, CutContour setup, color handling, fonts, and delivery format for vehicle wrap files.

The Print-Ready Wrap File Checklist: What Production Needs From Designers
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Every production manager has the same folder of horror stories: the gorgeous design delivered at 72dpi web resolution, the "vector" file that's one giant embedded JPEG, the cut line built as a regular stroke that printed magenta across a hood. This checklist is the contract between wrap designers and the print room — run it before every handoff and reprints mostly stop existing.

Scale and resolution

  • Work at a declared scale. 1:10 is the trade convention (1" in the file = 10" on the vehicle); 1:20 appears on large fleet work. State the scale IN the filename and on a slug outside the artwork: `transit-250-driver_1-10.pdf`.
  • Resolution at full size: 72–100 dpi effective. At 1:10 scale that means 720–1000 dpi in-file for raster elements. Nobody needs 300dpi at vehicle scale — files balloon and RIPs choke.
  • Verify against the real vehicle, not just the template. Templates drift from trim levels and model years — the honest accuracy conversation is in the template comparison. One field measurement (wheelbase or body line) calibrates everything.

Bleed and panel logic

  • 3" of bleed at vehicle scale beyond every trim edge, minimum. Installers pull, stretch, and re-position; edge-exact art guarantees a colored gap.
  • Design across panel seams, don't ignore them. Media prints at 54–60"; a box truck side is 3+ panels. Put panel breaks where the artwork forgives them (solid fields, not across a face or fine lettering), and include 0.5–1" overlap per seam.
  • Respect the hazard zones: door handles, recesses, body lines distort art — critical text dies there. The full layout discipline is in bleed, seams, and panel layout.

Cut lines: the CutContour convention

Contour cuts are driven by a named spot color, almost universally called `CutContour`, applied to a stroke on its own layer, set to overprint. The RIP separates that spot into a cut path instead of printing it. The three classic failures:

  • The path is a plain colored stroke, not the named spot → it PRINTS.
  • Two subtly different spot names (`CutContour` and `Cut Contour`) → half the shapes cut, half print.
  • The cut layer is flattened into the art during a save-as → nothing cuts.

Deliver cut paths as clean single-path vectors — no open segments, no doubled nodes. The mechanics and RIP-side behavior are covered in contour cut files, explained, and files exported from WrapStudio write true named CutContour separations automatically.

Color that survives the RIP

  • Build in CMYK (or tag everything with profiles and say so loudly). Untagged RGB is the top source of "that's not our blue" reprints.
  • Brand colors: specify Pantone references and let the print room match with their device profiles. Don't hand-convert Pantone to CMYK values yourself — their printer, their conversion.
  • Rich black for fields (60/40/40/100 is a safe default), 100K only for small text.
  • Ask for a printed proof swatch on the actual media for color-critical fleet work. One 12" square saves a 300 sq ft argument.

Fonts and delivery

  • Outline every font in the delivery file. Keep a live-text working file yourself for revisions.
  • Deliver layered PDF (preferred) or AI, packaged with links embedded, plus a flattened JPEG visual reference the installer can hold.
  • Include a layout sheet: vehicle views with panel numbers, scale note, media and laminate spec, and total square footage — the installer's map and the print room's sanity check.
  • Name files like production reads them: `client_vehicle_side_scale_version`. "final_FINAL_v3(2).ai" is how wrong versions print.

The 60-second preflight

Scale declared → bleed present → seams planned → CutContour named/spot/overprint → CMYK or profiled → fonts outlined → layout sheet included. Seven checks, one reprint budget saved. Print shops remember designers whose files just run — it's the quiet reputation that fills a freelance book, and it's half of what pricing design work with confidence rests on.

Wraptor Editorial

Sal Lara

Founder, Wraptor

Sal runs a vehicle wrap and tint studio and built Wraptor to handle the operations work he was sick of doing in spreadsheets. Writes about pricing, materials, and shop ops from inside the trade.

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