On Saturday 06 March 2004 17:40, Hans Forbrich wrote: > I am have (re)started discussions with a local professional > print/binding shop around professionally publishing some > Lilypond-based work. In part, I'd like to set something up around > Tex-based small-run business here (here being St. Albert - adjacent > to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada). > > Anyone have any related experiences or wisdom that I can/should > reference in the negotiations?
You are entitled to a lower rate because you are printing something for resale. That also affects sales and/or VA taxes, whatever you have in Alberta. Before they give you a lower rate, you can't blame them for wanting to make sure that you intend to sell your masterpieces rather than eat them all yourself, because this could cause a liability for them. Any commercial printer should be able to handle a postscript file, although you might be asked to put it on a Mac formatted diskette. Probably not, and IAC I believe you can do that with linux. Submit postscript to avoid unnecessary charges. Design a nice cover that you can use over and over again for different publications. You might get a break if they have too much of some particular cover stock. There is a rule of thumb that the the cost of printing to you should be one-tenth of the retail price. Printer to jobber to retailer to customer. Middlemen all want 50%. Sell as many direct as you can. daveA -- It's not that hard to understand the lesson of Viet Nam. Never never never never defend one tyrant against another, because The worst thing that can happen is you might win. The *Gulf* war was worse than Nam. D. Raleigh Arnold dra@ (http://www.) openguitar.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Lilypond-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user
