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Print ready in indesign

New Here ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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When I save an indesign document, the crop marks and bleed marks are outside the bleed and background and I need them on the background. 

The first picture is what I did. 

The second picture is what I reed. 

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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Increase your bleed and background color/graphic area until they extend into the crop marks.

 

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â•Ÿ Word & InDesign to Kindle & EPUB: a Guide to Pro Results (Amazon) â•¢

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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Hi @Pop24801432prm6 , Also in the Print or Export dialog’s Marks and Bleeds tab, make sure you check Use Document Bleed Settings, and the bleed is not set to 0:

 

Screen Shot 3.pngScreen Shot 4.pngScreen Shot 5.png

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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Your first picture shows only bleed marks, the second only crops, which, in my opinion, are not properly offest. ALL marks should appear completely outside the bleed area so that they do not accidentally show in case of poor trimming.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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Hi Peter, If the document includes a bleed, but the Bleed is set to 0 in the Print or Export dialog, the Bleed and Crop marks would be on top of each other and there would be no bleed area, which might be what‘s happening in @Pop24801432prm6 ’s first capture

 

Screen Shot 8.png

 

Screen Shot 9.png

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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I suppose that's possible, only the OP can say if that's the case. What strikes me as very strange is the appearance of objects that seem to extend beyond the bleed boundary in the first image.

It would help to see the Marks and bleeds dialog from the OP's settings.

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Community Expert ,
Jun 09, 2022 Jun 09, 2022

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It might be a combination of things, but I'd first look to see if there is bleed content past the document edges. That's what it looks like to me, and would be the easiest mistake to make overall.

 

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â•Ÿ Word & InDesign to Kindle & EPUB: a Guide to Pro Results (Amazon) â•¢

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