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Guide

How to Convert a Logo to EPS

EPS files are required by many print suppliers, sign shops, and legacy design workflows. Converting a logo to EPS is a two-step process: vectorize the raster logo first, then export the resulting SVG as EPS.

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About How to convert a logo to EPS

EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) is a PostScript-based vector format used extensively in professional print production. Most logos exist as PNG or JPEG raster files — these cannot be saved as EPS without first being converted to vector paths.

Step 1 — Vectorize the logo Upload the logo PNG or JPEG to the Logo Vectorizer. The AI traces the logo into clean SVG paths with flat solid-color fills. Download the SVG.

Step 2 — Open the SVG in Illustrator or Inkscape In Adobe Illustrator: File > Open to open the SVG. File > Save As > Encapsulated PostScript (.eps). Choose EPS version 10 for maximum compatibility. In the EPS options dialog, check 'Embed Fonts' if the logo contains text (though ideally text should be outlined before saving).

In Inkscape (free): File > Save a Copy > choose 'Encapsulated PostScript' from the format dropdown.

Step 3 — Verify the EPS Open the EPS in a viewer (Preview on macOS, or re-open in Illustrator) to confirm the paths look correct. Check that all colors are solid fills (no gradients unless intentional) and that any text elements are converted to outlines.

For print suppliers: deliver the EPS with outlined fonts, CMYK or Pantone color specifications, and a companion PDF for visual reference. Most print shops accept this package without further questions.