Posts Tagged ‘how-to’

Designing for Booklet Printing

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Print Booklet Design

This is a brief tutorial on print booklets design by PGprint.com. booklets printing can be created in InDesign, we show how to set up a multipage document properly for color booklet printing. Our booklet printing services will in conjunction with this video tutorial will provide you with a huge head start on the setup process.

Print Booklet Design - PGprint.com
Runtime
7:42
Views
4,779

Christopher Robinson

Check out our Booklet Printing Service after finish your first multipage project.

Appointment Card Design Video

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Design Appointment Cards

This is a brief tutorial on appointment card design by PGprint.com. Appointment card designs can be created in InDesign, we show how you can modify one layout to create a library of alternate ideas for future usage. It can be thought of as creating several InDesign templates for the next appointment card project you design.

Appointment Card Design - PGprint.com
Runtime
4:14
Views
726

Christopher Robinson

Check out our Appointment Card Printing after finish your first appointment card project.

Template, Margin and Guide Tutorial

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
Template, Margin and Guide Tutorial - PGprint.com
Runtime
2:50
Views
696

The Importance of Bleed

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Bleed is one of the most important factors in any successful design. If you don’t factor it in, it can ruin your design. First lets explain bleed. Wikipedia defines bleed as “printing that goes beyond the edge of the sheet after trimming.” To be more specific with an example if you have an image or a background color that goes to the edge of your printed page, the bleed is the portion of that color and/or image that goes beyond the trim.

The standard amount of bleed in offset printing is 1/8 inch. This amount allows the printer a little variance during the bindery and trimming functions. Documents are typically cut in stacks of hundreds so the trim can vary slightly. Bleed allows for this variance so raw white paper doesn’t show on the edge of your design.

For a graphic representation of bleed check out our section on common printing mistakes

Christopher Robinson