![]() ![]() I have an hp® ENVY 4516, so the print menus for your particular printer model may differ a bit, in which case you need to find theĮquivalent commands for your model in particular, the biggest difference may be that this printer model features automatic 2-sided Old thread, but for anyone finding it via their Google search results, the procedure below is exactly what I use to print in booklet You do need to understand the final printed design and use the appropriate paper size and page order to create it. except that OOo isn't designed to account for gradually changing margins on the outside edge.įor a thicker book, a different form of printing and binding is required. ![]() If you can account for gradually changing outside margins on a thicker book so the text appears equidistant from the edge throughout, and can pay for the trimming or find a way to accomplish it, I suppose that's not such a problem. After about ten leaves of paper, it's not a very practical approach because the thickness at the fold will create a shelf effect at the edges, which must be trimmed. "Use brochure printing for booklets" is an easy, quick response and one that I've casually tossed out with some frequency, but it doesn't give much consideration to the intended product. The main thing they have in common is that the Brochure print setting is useful for arranging the pages in booklet order.īut, one problem with the Brochure setting that I failed to mention is that it's only useful for pages that are printed two-up, duplex, folded and saddle-stitched (stapled) at the fold to create the booklet. That can be helpful, but a booklet with page styles has different requirements than a standard brochure. Trifold.odt (41.Moondancer wrote:Solveig Haugland has an article on brocures which might be helpful. As the white space is part of a "proper page", you can type there if you want. But when the three frames are put on the page, there is a small bit of the original page left - the white space for folding - which is still the original page. (These frames are "interlinked frames" so the text flows to the next correct frame). Why can this happen? You can think of a frame as being a "separate page within a page" glued on top of the original page. The template makes sure that the text goes in the right places. Incidentally, I inserted my text by deleting everything except the title from the template, and then pasting in my 14 paragraphs under the title. It will only take about 1500 words, and if you put in more, those words will "disappear below a red arrow" in the centre frame on the top - ie drop off the bottom of the last page of the folded brochure. ![]() It will help if you show hidden characters with View > Non printing characters, or click the "backwards P between the compass and the magnifying glass on the toolbar" as it will show you how the document "works". You need to delete these xxxx, and make sure you type where the text is. See the attached document where I have filled the template with some text, and added xxxx highlighted in yellow where you must not type. You shouldn't - you must always make sure you are typing inside the boxes. What I think you have done is clicked in the white space where the fold should be, and typed there. This template creates what are called linked frames so that when you write, the text flows into the next correct frame - see how the paragraph numbers go. I assume you mean the template at Tri-Fold brochure template. ![]()
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