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Does the Background Need to Reach the Bleed?

Contributor ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

Hi everyone,

This might be a super basic question, but should my background extend all the way to the bleed? This is for a book project, and I am not using any specific background color. The backound is just the overall layout. 

Screenshot 2025-03-27 at 16.18.30.png

 

Screenshot 2025-03-27 at 16.14.25.png

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LEGEND ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

You don't have any "background"?

 

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Contributor ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

@Robert at ID-Tasker I mean like an image that goes across the page or a different background color. 

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Community Expert ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

Any color or image that reaches the edge of the page must extend to the bleed frame. 

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Contributor ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

@Willi Adelberger Thank you for your input! Now its clear to me.

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Community Expert ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

Any element intended to bleed — reach the trimmed edge of the page  —  should extend all the way to the bleed line, or past it so that it is trimmed/truncated there on export.

 

The page background itself does not need to visually reach the bleed line; it's assumed the paper goes that far on the press. Your pages above look fine. (And you don't need to specify a bleed for most printers/print services if nothing extends past the page margins, or at least the printer's defined "live content" limits of about 3/8 of an inch from the page edges.)

 

But some print services, KDP notably among them, will throw an error if there is a "gap" between an element that extends into the bleed but does not reach the bleed line. So for best practice, any line, graphic, background, etc. intended to bleed should, yes, reach or overlap that bleed limit.

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Contributor ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

@James Gifford—NitroPressThank you very much for your input! So, if I understand correctly, in my case, I can leave the layout as it is? 

 

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Community Expert ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025

If you have no bleeds, you don't need to worry about or export with bleed. That the page image doesn't extend out there is just a quirk of how InDesign displays things.

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LEGEND ,
Mar 27, 2025 Mar 27, 2025
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@Mateomono 

 

This red line around the page is just a visualisation - in case you would have any graphic objects close to the edge - so you know where the bleed/trimming area ends.

 

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