SEND A FILE
Please login before uploading files. Call the office for username and password if you do not already have it.
Select your file, fill in the form fields, click "upload file" and our pre-press department will receive an email alerting us that your file has been uploaded. We'll also send you an email confirmation.
File Size and Acceptable Formats
You can send up to 5 files combined total file size 50 MB. For security reasons we ONLY accept the following file extentions: .jpg, .jpeg, .gif, .tif, .png, .pdf, .txt, .ai, .psd, .eps, .sitx, .qxd, .qxp, .zip, .sea, .sit, .doc, .rtf, .rft, .html, .htm, .indd.
File Compression
Server Time Out Error Message
A "Server Timeout" message while uploading files suggests that your computer has lost its connection with the web server before the upload of your file or files are complete. There are several possible reasons why your connection may time-out:
1. Publishing large files and/or slow Internet connection: Web servers enforce a time-out period on any process in order to protect the server from being overloaded. This time-out period varies. A slower Internet connection can be a factor, or if the size of the file to be transferred is large. Since both connection speed and file size are factors, there is no pre-determined file size that is too large to upload. Some users encounter problems uploading files over 1 MB in size, while other users can publish a file over 5 MB in size without difficulty.
2. Proxy Server or Firewall: Your ISP or corporate network may use a proxy server or firewall. Data sent and received from your computer passes through this proxy server. Many proxy servers send network requests from dynamically assigned IP addresses taken from a pool of available IPs assigned to that server. Your connection with the web server is established based on the IP address from which you initially established your upload session. If that IP address fluctuates, the web server may assume that you are no longer connected and end your session. AOL is one such Internet provider that employs proxy servers which may occasionally interfere with the upload of larger files.




