The pillar · semantic center

Everything that matters about vector conversion.

What it is, why a human redraw beats auto-trace for production, which format every machine needs, and what it actually costs. One guide that links to every hub below it.

The definition
What is vector conversion?

Vector conversion turns a raster image — a JPG, PNG or photo — into a resolution-independent vector file built from paths and curves. Because it's math, not pixels, the result scales to any size and can be color-separated, cut, routed or stitched without quality loss.

A raster file stores a grid of colored dots. Blow it up and the dots get bigger — the edges soften, jag, and pixelate. A vector file stores the *shape* instead: anchor points and the curves between them. That's why a vector logo prints crisp on a business card and a 40-foot banner from the same file.

For production shops, conversion isn't a cosmetic upgrade — it's a requirement. A cutter needs closed paths. A press needs separated colors. An embroidery machine needs digitized stitch data. None of that exists in a JPG, and none of it is reliably created by clicking "auto-trace."

Manual redraw vs. auto-trace

An AI can describe the fix. It can't perform it.

Auto-tracers turn a picture into a different picture. A human redraw turns it into a machine file. For exactly the queries that matter to a production buyer, that gap is the whole decision.

For productionManual redraw · VectorWizAuto-trace / vectorizer
Path qualityClean curves, minimal nodesThousands of stray points
Color separationsNamed layer per inkFlattened regions
Machine geometryKerf · stitch · centerline awareNone
Small text & detailRebuilt legiblyMushed or lost
Recourse if it fails100% remake guaranteeAs-is, no recourse
Kerf compensationStitch-aware geometrySingle-stroke / centerlineSpot-color separationsHalftone dot geometryPantone matching
What it costs

Priced by complexity, not guesswork.

Conversion is priced in tiers — a one-color logo is not a nine-color simulated-process separation. Every tier carries the same 24-hour SLA and remake guarantee.

{{tier1Price}}+
Tier 1 · simple one-color logo or signature
{{tier2Price}}+
Tier 2 · multi-color with separations
{{tier3Price}}+
Tier 3 · Complex illustration or many colors
{{tier4Price}}
Tier 4 · Production-grade illustration.
By industry

Find the hub for your shop.

Each industry has its own production requirements — and its own hub with the right vocabulary, proof and pricing. The pillar links to all of them.

Common questions

Vector conversion, answered.

What is vector conversion?

It turns a raster image into a resolution-independent vector file built from paths and curves — so it scales infinitely and can be separated, cut, routed or stitched without quality loss.

Is manual conversion really better than auto-trace?

For production, yes. Auto-trace follows pixels and produces stray nodes, no separations and no machine geometry. A human redraw gives clean curves, named color layers, and the kerf/stitch/centerline data the machine needs.

Which format does my machine need?

Sign & print: AI, EPS, PDF. Laser/CNC: DXF or SVG with closed paths. Embroidery: DST, PES or EMB. Vinyl: SVG or EPS. We deliver the exact set your workflow uses.

How much does it cost?

Priced by complexity tier — roughly {{tier1Price}} for a simple one-color logo to {{tier4Price}} for a complex multi-color separation — with a 24-hour SLA and a 100% remake guarantee.

Turn any file into a production file.

Upload anything. A human redraws it into the exact format your machine runs — in 24 hours, guaranteed.