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Participant
January 27, 2024
Answered

epub white borders

  • January 27, 2024
  • 1 reply
  • 366 views

why pdf to epub conversion in Indesign results in white border on left and right side of epub book?

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer James Gifford—NitroPress

This is an extremely poor choice of workflow that is unlikely to ever have successful results.

 

First, FXL, fixed-page EPUB, is a largely obsolete layout that has many problems. It's suitable only for 'picture page' books such as children's books and graphic novels, and should be used selectively even there. For anything like pages of text, it's the wrong choice, even though it seems to be a simpler option. For one thing, it's is very difficult to work with FXL EPUB after export, so it's a "you get what you get" format and resolving problems like this can be somewhere between very involved and impossible.

 

Next, placing PDFs in InDesign is a sort of specialized, niche way to get content to an end format. It is sometimes a good (technical) option, but going back to a live, source document instead gives more options for final output. And if you are indeed placing "pictures" on the pages, it again would be better to have basic graphics formats (JPEG, etc.) instead of PDF, simply because there are fewer steps in which export, settings, layout, etc. have to be considered and corrected.

 

Back up to original content (text or graphics) and lay that out as your InDeisgn pages; if you can, export as a reflowable EPUB instead of FXL. Any other path — working with PDF from a prior app, exporting to FXL, etc. — is going to be a headache and truly acceptable results may not be obtainable.

1 reply

BobLevine
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 27, 2024

Are you saying you placed a PDF in InDesign and then exported it to EPUB? What version of EPUB? FXL or Reflowable?

Sounds like it was simply converted to a graphic in the export. Were you expecting something else?

Participant
January 27, 2024

its not reflowable export. i export as fixed layout epub

James Gifford—NitroPress
Legend
January 27, 2024

This is an extremely poor choice of workflow that is unlikely to ever have successful results.

 

First, FXL, fixed-page EPUB, is a largely obsolete layout that has many problems. It's suitable only for 'picture page' books such as children's books and graphic novels, and should be used selectively even there. For anything like pages of text, it's the wrong choice, even though it seems to be a simpler option. For one thing, it's is very difficult to work with FXL EPUB after export, so it's a "you get what you get" format and resolving problems like this can be somewhere between very involved and impossible.

 

Next, placing PDFs in InDesign is a sort of specialized, niche way to get content to an end format. It is sometimes a good (technical) option, but going back to a live, source document instead gives more options for final output. And if you are indeed placing "pictures" on the pages, it again would be better to have basic graphics formats (JPEG, etc.) instead of PDF, simply because there are fewer steps in which export, settings, layout, etc. have to be considered and corrected.

 

Back up to original content (text or graphics) and lay that out as your InDeisgn pages; if you can, export as a reflowable EPUB instead of FXL. Any other path — working with PDF from a prior app, exporting to FXL, etc. — is going to be a headache and truly acceptable results may not be obtainable.