 |
 |
| AVAILABLE
PRINTING SERVICES |
 |
| Magazine
Printing
|
| Catalog
Printing |
| Digest
Size Printing |
| Brochure
Printing |
| Mailing
Services |
| International
Shipping |
| Specialty
Binding |
 |
|
|
|
|
| |
| |
4-page booklet imposition
Imposing Order: Imposition and Printer's Spreads
Printer's spreads and reader's spreads for
cards, newsletters, booklets
In order to read, print out of order
Page 1, Page 2, Page 3, Page 4 ... that's the order in which we
read a book or newsletter. But is that the way we print them?
Not always.
Sometimes pages must be printed out of order. On this and subsequent
pages take a look at some simple examples that demonstrate imposition
or printer spreads -- the process of printing multiple pages
on a piece of paper in such a way that when folded (and perhaps
cut) they end up in proper 1, 2, 3, 4 order for readers.
See the
first sidebar illustration (click on the image to bring up a
slide show of all illustrations) of a simple 4 page booklet
printed on letter-size paper (digest size - 2 pages per side)
or 4 pages on an 11x17 page (typical size for an 8.5x11 newsletter,
for example).
Add 4 more pages to that booklet and your page numbering changes
as shown in the second illustration.
Software designed specifically for creating greeting cards
often handles the page layout and printing automatically.
However if you are using a graphics or page layout
program that doesn't, see the third illustration for how you would
layout a side-folding greeting card printed on 1 side of a letter-size
paper.
Illustrations: 4-page
| 8-page
| Greeting
Card
Next,
look at an example of larger imposition layouts for commercial
printing and get tips on saving money with careful imposition
planning.
|
|
|
| |
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
| |
| |
| Environmentally
Responsible |
Printing |
| |
|
|