There are many spreads with the same full page left hand background texture art that will need to bleed into the gutter.
Gutter bleed design.
This is a visual reference to stop you from crowding the finished edge the solid red line with text and any graphics that don t require bleed.
In the book printing world bleed in particular is an important concept to understand.
If spreads are very important to the overall look and feel of your book we recommend binding types that lay flat such as saddle stitched booklets spiral bound booklets or wire o booklets.
Set the same bleed on all sides or click the chain icon to set different values for the top bottom inside and outside settings.
They all have the same sets of master pages.
Spreads can be very difficult to design for when producing perfect bound books or hard cover books due to the gutter.
Today let s look a little deeper at this.
I am deep into the design of a wiro bound reference book that is over 400 pages.
Scroll and then click bleed and slug to expand the panel.
The example below shows the appropriate use of gutter for the text along the top left and bottom edges of the design.
We touched on full bleed printing last week when we looked at making a print ready pdf.
For example if you are designing a postcard with an image you want to cover the entire background you would need the image to extend beyond the edge of your design by 125 inches typical bleed size.
The dotted green line represents gutter.
Type a bleed value in any units.
I am creating it in sections to eventually gather the section files into an indesign book.