Skip to main content
Known Participant
April 8, 2017
Answered

Master page content show on the pasteboard.

  • April 8, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 2331 views

Hi,

I use ID since CS5 release, but after the last update I noticed some issue with master pages.

The content on the left page appear on the pasteboard of a single left page. I opened an old CC2016 document and this don't happen.

What i option should I to check to solve this annoying problem?

Thank you for your help.

Master Page

First Page

CC 2016 Document Master Page

CC 2016 Document Single Page

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer winterm

Move objects from the spine just a tiny bit...

2 replies

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 8, 2017

I'm not sure it is new to 2017. If any part of the left master page item is inside the trim of the right page it would show and that would include the stroke alignment in your example.

So here the bounds of the circle is on the right trim of the left page, and the circle's stroke is aligned to the inside:

But if I align it to the outside of center, the stroke is inside the right page and it shows on page 1:

winterm
Legend
April 8, 2017

Well, here on CS6, another solution could be: align strokes to outside and re-adjust position back (since the objects will move slightly after aligning strokes). In this case they can still touch the spine if this important for design. However, I usually avoid touching spine with the very edge of an object until it's really necessary. Uh, old habits die hard.

winterm
wintermCorrect answer
Legend
April 8, 2017

Move objects from the spine just a tiny bit...

happie_97
Community Expert
Community Expert
April 9, 2017

I agree with winterm, this was an issue in earlier versions of InDesign as well. Anything too close to the spine will appear on both pages. Interesting thing is that if you remove it just a little and move it back it goes away permanently, most of the time.

Known Participant
June 11, 2017

I am having the same issue with grids. This is not normal.