![]() ![]() For some of the draft artwork she has sent me, I would like to show her how it's laying out in Affinity. Hi - I'm doing the layout and design on a children's picture book and working remotely with the illustrator. I've played with printing the bleed and displaying printer marks, but it doesn't give me what I'm looking for. ![]() Regardless, I have infinite faith in her and want to be able to give her this critical visual information.) or due to language-based communication lapses. This is my first time doing anything like this and she's an experienced illustrator, so I'm not sure how much of what I'm experiencing is normal, or not. Is this possible or do I just need to take a screenshot of my Affinity workspace? (I did give her all of the page size/orientation/margin and bleed size specs before we started. To that end, I would like to be able to create a PDF (or really, any file type) that shows the blue line representing the margins and the light grey line representing the bleed so that she can see where small adjustments may need to be made to how subjects are placed in the illustration. Like to the programmers of Acrobat.Hi - I'm doing the layout and design on a children's picture book and working remotely with the illustrator. Hope this information is useful to someone. I guess if you would need to resize significantly both the left and the right margins you may have to repeat the production process a second time.Īfter 1 'pass' I didn't notice any decrease of the quality the text stayed sharp etc. "FinePrint" can adjust the Binding margin and that means either on the left or on the right side of the page. In my case the outcome worked for me in one go. "FinePrint" is culturally-aware: it can work with both documents that flip from right-to-left as well as those that flip from left-to-right. That file I opened next in "Acrobat XI Pro" where I replaced the now somewhat squeezed cover of the book with the one I had saved from the original PDF. In "PDF Factory Pro" I saved the file as a PDF. There I adjusted the Binding margin and "printed" further on to "PDF Factory Pro". Next I 'printed' the file to "FinePrint". Not to an extend that it was an issue.Īs my PDF (a conversion from an EPUB eBook) was a book, I Extracted in "Acrobat XI Pro" the original cover of the book from the PDF-with-the-tiny-margins. It has to be said that when increasing the Binding margin in "FinePrint" the whole page scaled a little bit down. Well, I am a long term user of "FinePrint" and its mate "PDF Factory Pro" and with that team onboard it was rather easy to create a PDF with a nice margin. In 2006 no one neither seemed to have a great solution at hand. I recently upgraded to "Acrobat XI Pro" and still couldn't figure out how to keep the text further away from the edge of a page. Picked up on a post from 2006 ( thread223-1256844: Increasing Margins on PDF) regarding how to increase margins in PDF documents. Thread223-1256844: Increasing Margins on PDF
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