Hello Framers,
We have books with different text frames for left and right master
pages (in order to leave more space in the gutter than on the
outside). When you insert a graphics frame for an illustration it
references the page, not the text frame. The result is that if the
pagination
Putting the illustration in an anchored frame, not a graphic frame,
would be the standard way to do this, so that it floats and adjusts to
the right/left layout changes according to the parameters of the
paragraph tag...
And as far as twiddling the default setting, there are at least one or
two
James Monaco wrote:
We have books with different text frames for left and right
master pages (in order to leave more space in the gutter than
on the outside). When you insert a graphics frame for an
illustration it references the page, not the text frame. The
result is that if the
Hello Framers,
We have books with different text frames for left and right master
pages (in order to leave more space in the gutter than on the
outside). When you insert a graphics frame for an illustration it
references the page, not the text frame. The result is that if the
pagination
Putting the illustration in an anchored frame, not a graphic frame,
would be the standard way to do this, so that it floats and adjusts to
the right/left layout changes according to the parameters of the
paragraph tag...
And as far as twiddling the default setting, there are at least one or
two
James Monaco wrote:
> We have books with different text frames for left and right
> master pages (in order to leave more space in the gutter than
> on the outside). When you insert a graphics frame for an
> illustration it references the page, not the text frame. The
> result is that if the
=grafixtraining@lists.frameusers.com
[mailto:framers-bounces+matt=grafixtraining.com at lists.frameusers.com] On
Behalf Of James Monaco
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2007 9:39 AM
To: brad
Subject: Frames within Frames Question
Hello Framers,
We have books with different text frames for left and right master