I have attached a Letter paper size version of the "inksaver" version of
the template, so you can upload it under your name. All I did was make
it letter page size and adjusted the half-circle graphics to be used
within those margins. The file name might need changing. [note: it
will be stripped from the list posting]
As for the "no margins printing", my letter size printers have various
minimum margin sizes. The only real time I get to print "borderless" or
without margins, is printing photos. So you should make a brochure that
does not need to worry about the small margins at the top/bottom/sides
of the sheets. I decided to use a sheet margin that would work for a
"panel margin" as it appears when the sheet is folded. I used 0.2
inches for the sheet margins and 0.4 inches for the column margins.
When I turn off the "shrink to fit page" option on my printer[s], this
works well for me with the various brochures I have created in the past.
One thing you should include in the "template" version is the font[s]
used. You are using "Open Sans Condensed". I know that LO will list
the font in the font "drop down window" even if it is not installed on
your system. So to help people, please list the fonts, all of them.
Open Sans Condensed - normal, bold, italic, bold italic, etc., etc..
Every font and font "style" used since each style has a different font
file that needs to be downloaded and installed. Also, I had a
discussion before [off list] about the use of "normal" verses
"condensed" fonts for a LO file. There was some concern that the
browser reading options, for reading LO files within the browser itself,
that people have asked about may not work properly with a condensed
font. I am in favor of condensed fonts to help with the formatting of
the text to allow more information per panel, but the fonts used needs
to be stated in any template that does not use "standard" fonts that 99%
of the users would have on their systems already.
To be honest, having a file created background color never worked for
me. Yes, you need to do that for the offset printing version of a
brochure, since all they use is white paper stock, or prefer to use,
since you do not find white ink anymore for systems. What I tend to do
is make brochures that look good with colored paper. If the theme of the
product is green, I see if I can get a pastel green to work for the
brochure. I have one brochure that was a fund raiser brochure for a
non-profit organization and it had maps and other graphics that printed
well on about a dozen different colored paper stock used instead of the
plain white stock.
Also, for the "home printing" brochures, you need to look into the
"bleed through" of the image to the other side of the sheet of paper.
Sometimes, on many types of "standard" paper stock that are needed to
run through most printers may allow the printing on one side of the
paper to be look "shadowed" thought to the opposite side of the page
sheet. Heavy and dark graphics can do that, even with quality paper
that is used with the feeding requirements for modern laser and inkjet
printers. To compact the printer sizes, the internal paper "rollers"
are getting smaller and the "stiffer" "heavier" stocks of paper can
really have problems with feeding through these printers. Actually, I
find that the heavy stock of paper, card and cover stocks, that are
available at the local "big box store" office supply centers do not have
the best print quality for a b&w or color laser printer, vs. inkjet
printer. I am still looking for a colored heavy stock paper that can
run though the laser properly and actually have a quality printing that
does not "feel like" the toner will flake off any minute. I do not know
why this is, but the paper seemed to be that was for the past few years
now, or at least the heavy stock I could find that I needed to use. My
color laser [dead now] and my b&w one I use now both did not like the
heavy colored stock paper available at the paper stores. It was the
same for the crisp printing of that same store's high quality
printing/copying machine. Maybe it is just the way systems are now.
- - -
Now we need to get some "approved" text to go with the template. Marc
and I were working on the text for the brochure[s] we were working on.
Hopefully we could get some good edits to that text. I have been ill on
and off for the past month or so, so maybe I missed some of that
discussion, but it would be nice to have some "standardized" text and
information for a brochure. We could design the "look and feel" of the
brochure all we want, but without a good set of text and other
information included within the panels of it, . . . . well it can be
pretty but useless to our needs.
https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/File:Brochure-lo-4-letter-size--v8-green-logo--no-tdf.odt
Look at this brochure's text. You will see what we are trying to make
for a brochure that any "English users" could use or translate and
modify to their own languages for others to use. The text is important
and there are a lot of people with limited marketing skills so we need
to make a "complete package" for them to use.
On 04/02/2013 05:52 AM, Issa Alkurtass wrote:
Hello Tim,
Kracked_P_P---webmaster wrote on April 01, 2013 11:58 PM:
I need a brochure that I can print out 20 or 30 copies whenever I run
out or need more. This one does not work for my home office.
Sorry, I am not a fan if you cannot print it out so it looks good
without an expensive paste ink press system.
I absolutely didn't take this into account, as I said before I was just trying
to match the website design. The dark title page was me making sure the title
page didn't stand out less than the inside pages.
I've made another version which only uses black and regular green (rather than
olive) which can also works in black and white:
https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/File:Brochure-lo-4---A4-paper-size--v4--websitelike--inksaver.odt
I know it isn't the same as the website anymore, but it keeps the half circle
design while using a lot less ink. Also only the title page colors are changed,
the rest is the same.
The "gray" background leaves white edges.
I think these should be cut/not printed for the brochure to work, because the
half circle isn't meant to have white space above it.
Regards,
Issa Alkurtass
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