Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello there, often when synchronising (book) files or even (right now) when writing text on a page which does not affect the rest of the document in terms of space, a window pops up stating "Spread cannot have more than 10 pages". Why? How do I solve this? Also, I noticed that when adding a page to a file (which I just did because of this message, after which the file synched at last), the new page/s go to the right of the last spread in the pages panel. Why? Boo hoo! I would much appreciate any help.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi Rob,
No, we create 16 panel, double sided instruction leaflets that we want to be able to export as spreads for double sided print and singles for digital single page format
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Is this something you are printing in house, or are you sending it to a commercial printer. If you are sending it to a printer they should be able to impose the pages on the press sheet in the needed arrangement—you don’t need to send them spreads.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You could also do your own page imposition. I this example the pages are 5"x7"—Step and Repeat 16 frames on an 80"x7" page, then place the pages from the edit document:
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thanks Rob! That is good compromise. It means two files, but one will auto-update so not the end of the world. Much appreciated.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Why would, say, 8 doc pages of double page layouts not produce exactly the same result?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
The problem would be if you wanted to view 16 pages side by side, e.g. an accordian fold—the limit is 10 pages.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Right. 8 doc pages, 2 layout pages per, one spread... 16 pages. You could probably go up to 30 layout pages with this workaround. Why is it not a reasonable option to the convoluted workarounds above (like going back to an obsolete version of ID)?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You want this document preview:
Not this:
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I feel like we're not quite sharing a common language, here. 🙂 I fully understand the multi-page spread need. So make it an 8-page spread and double up the page layout on each, for 16 output/print/fold/finish pages. Or more.
I don't see any critical need for each page to have its own ID document page — 2-up is quite manageable for layout and design, and the 10-page spread limit is bypassed.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I feel like we're not quite sharing a common language, here.
Maybe you missed this from @Glove4Help , (not the OP)?
we want to be able to export as spreads for double sided print and singles for digital single page format
@Glove4Help , wants to export individual panels/pages for screens, and a 16 panel/page spread for print. Creating an imposition document lets you do both—a 16 page spread from the imposition document, and individual pages from the edit document. Perhaps @Glove4Help is printing in house?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I guess I did — this thread has been around the block a couple of times. But, *shrug*, this looks like 16 pages in a spread to me, even if the structure is not a precise 1:1 match:
...and unless there's a need to export and re-export frequently, export to 8 page images and a bit of automation in Photoshop would seem to be a simple path to the individual page images, with the bonus of a step to allow a little optimization.
Yes, it's nice when one tool does everything. But I see the above as, if anything, a slightly superior workflow, using a highly optimized tool for each destination. ID's image export is... good but not great; a pass through PS can only be an asset.
But curses upon that 10-page limitation, anyway! 🙂
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@rob day concertina fold or roll fold leaflets for example. These easy go over 10 pages/panels. And quite common... Your solution (to have an imposed doc) is best option for current limitation.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@Glove4Help said: "… I'm just desperate. I wondered if you'd used an old copy of Indesign with that script to create what you have, could you get a copy of that indesign and script, create a two spread version of what you have and then open it in new Indesign? …"
Hi @Glove4Help ,
as far as I can remember InDesign version 7.5 (CS 5.5) was the last one (or perhaps the only one??) where a trick by scripting could create a spread with more than 10 pages. I think, that the code for this script still could be found in this very forum. It required a two pages document to start with where the first page has a different size than the second one.
Regards,
Uwe Laubender
( Adobe Community Expert )
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thanks UWE! I have a copy of CS6 still, so it's possible it would work with that. I'll see if I can find the script as well.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi @Glove4Help ,
CS6, InDesign version 8, was the one where this did not work anymore.
As far as I can remember…
Regards,
Uwe Laubender
( Adobe Community Expert )