Skip to main content
muhammad sufyani611218
Participating Frequently
February 9, 2019
Answered

Indesign Page Layout

  • February 9, 2019
  • 3 replies
  • 875 views

Hi everyone.So i recently started making this brochure for a school assignment so i arranged my pages to be sent for offset printing but when i layout my printed spreads ontop of one another the elements of the right side of the spread is below the left one although both spreads are on the same level when viewed on the computer screen and it creates disharmony amongst the spread. Does anyone know a fix to this?

    Correct answer maxwithdax

    Muhammad, Looks like you have a few things going on...

    1. you should be designing your file as you would turn the pages. NOT as the printer would impose. [1], [2][3], [4][5]  NOT [1][12]. [2][11] etc. etc.

    2. It looks like you are using "fit to page" and printing spreads across the short width of the paper. If you want to print a booklet, then there is a feature for that within InDesign, but you need to still setup your document 1,2,3,4,5....

    3. As Derek states, your printing company will do the switch (imposition) of the pages.

    You are making this more complex than it needs to be.

    -Dax

    3 replies

    maxwithdax
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    February 10, 2019

    The 1st thing you need to do is make sure that your pages can be divided by the number 4  to ensure that your booklet will properly layout. Then you need to call your printer and ask them exactly how they want the file to be  Exported.  Every printing company has a different workflows so they might want spreads. They might want you to print booklet with bleeds and crops. It all just depends on their workflow.

    -dax

    rob day
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    February 10, 2019

    Every printing company has a different workflows so they might want spreads.

    Imposition software expects pages—InDesign’s built-in Print Booklet provides a means for printing rudimentary impositions and it needs pages. I think if you provided the 2-3 facing pages as a spread, the printer would have to intervene and somehow cut apart the spread because in a 16 page imposition 2 has to be moved to the left of page 15, and 3 has to moved to the right of page 14.

    Derek Cross
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    February 10, 2019

    You send your printer individual pages (not spreads) – the printer will do the imposition.

    Unless your printer has given you a spec, select PDF/X-4 from the InDesign presets, select, in the Export Adobe PDF dialogue box Pages (not Spreads), and under the Marks and Bleeds tab tick Crop Marks and also tick Use Document Bleed Settings (ensure the images that bleed do so).

    muhammad sufyani611218
    Participating Frequently
    February 10, 2019

    my eventual binding technique requires me to use spreads though

    maxwithdax
    Community Expert
    maxwithdaxCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
    Community Expert
    February 10, 2019

    Muhammad, Looks like you have a few things going on...

    1. you should be designing your file as you would turn the pages. NOT as the printer would impose. [1], [2][3], [4][5]  NOT [1][12]. [2][11] etc. etc.

    2. It looks like you are using "fit to page" and printing spreads across the short width of the paper. If you want to print a booklet, then there is a feature for that within InDesign, but you need to still setup your document 1,2,3,4,5....

    3. As Derek states, your printing company will do the switch (imposition) of the pages.

    You are making this more complex than it needs to be.

    -Dax

    maxwithdax
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    February 10, 2019

    a screenshot of your issue would help us to help you better understand your issue. We need to know how many pages, what size, what kind of spread and what kind of layout. A screenshot will help us see most of that and give you options.

    -Dax

    muhammad sufyani611218
    Participating Frequently
    February 10, 2019