Graphic Design
Page Layout
When
you first open a CDman template
for a booklet, you will notice three colored lines. We have
selected Red, Green and Blue colored lines.

RED
LINE
: Like in baseball the warning track warns the player that they
are getting close to smashing their head into a wall. This
warning line is telling you to keep critical text and images
inside this line or risk getting them cut off.
BLUE
LINE
: This is the wall. A hydraulic blade comes smashing down on
1000 sheets of paper cutting the panels from the press sheet.
Also called the final "trim" mark.
GREEN
LINE
: This is the bleed line. Often misunderstood, you must think
about the hydraulic cutting blade to understand what bleed is
for. When you have 1000 sheets of paper stacked up on top of
each other and a cutting blade slicing through all those sheets
of paper, there is bound to be a degree of slippage by the time
the blade gets through all the sheets. It can be as small as
1/64th of an inch, but this small amount can leave an unsightly
white line running across your page.
Bleed

Booklet cut without the designer adding bleed.
Booklet was placed on a black mat for illustration purposes
Solution:
If the designer had stretched the orange background to the
green line of our template, then even if the cutting blade had
been way off, there would be no white line since there is plenty
of safety margin or "bleed". Simple solution, but
important :-)
Gatefolds
vs. Wrap Folds
A Gate Fold has the two most outer panels fold inward first and
then the resulting "gate" is then folded once more to
make the final 5" square.

A Wrap
fold is what most designers use for long spreads. It is most
common to use a wrap fold.
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