Summary: | Trim marks are not available for use when a professional printer requires them | ||
---|---|---|---|
Product: | LibreOffice | Reporter: | Taylor <smocktaylor> |
Component: | Printing and PDF export | Assignee: | Not Assigned <libreoffice-bugs> |
Status: | RESOLVED DUPLICATE | ||
Severity: | enhancement | CC: | d656, libreoffice-ux-advise, vsfoote |
Priority: | medium | Keywords: | needsUXEval |
Version: | 5.2.2.2 release | ||
Hardware: | All | ||
OS: | All | ||
See Also: | https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=76629 | ||
Whiteboard: | |||
Crash report or crash signature: | Regression By: | ||
Bug Depends on: | |||
Bug Blocks: | 99525 |
Description
Taylor
2016-10-21 23:29:02 UTC
Thought about closing WFM, but to new for UX discussion related to bug 99525. In Draw you can size the page larger than final desired print size, set margin to zero. You can layout trim marks, and registration marks on a Master page from main menu's View -> Master mode. Also trivial to allow for bleed and compose slugs outside the trim marks. You have full control to configure the page, margin and spacing to object while laying out the document. Actual CMYK would not be controlled from within LibreOffice--rather use a "print to file" format supporting CMYK. Or a print driver capable of splitting out the CMYK. It is not as convenient as some dedicated DTP programs, and there is no ability to easily toggle printer markup. But kind of believe that doing more than that is going to be beyond scope of project. I have done what you suggest with various documents, i.e. making the page "bigger" to accommodate bleed/crop marks, and so on. I just have to figure out how to add crop marks to the document -- the border section of the page dialog doesn't quite get me what I want. If I could have the borders go all the way to the edge of the page, it would be better. Workarounds for items mentioned in initial bug report: Make page size larger than required (allows for bleed) Add borders (KIND OF ACTS LIKE CROP MARKS, may have some black borders on final piece) around entire page, change "spacing to contents" and margins appropriately Export to PDF and then use ghostscript to convert to CMYK. For reference, I use the following command to convert to pdfs to the CMYK color space (which is why I was requesting an enhancement on crop marks): #!/usr/bin/env bash gs \ -o "cmyk-${1}" \ -sDEVICE=pdfwrite \ -sProcessColorModel=DeviceCMYK \ -sColorConversionStrategy=CMYK \ -sColorConversionStrategyForImages=CMYK \ -dEncodeColorImages=false \ -dOverrideICC \ "${1}" I probably should have focused on writer, since that is the program used when creating business cards from the menu, instead of mentioning draw. ---- After typing that all up, crop marks might go better in the "Page Style" "Borders" section. (In reply to Taylor from comment #2) > ... > I probably should have focused on writer, since that is the program used > when creating business cards from the menu, instead of mentioning draw. > Maybe, but reality is that LibreOffice (and OO before) provides for this type of layout annotation only through Draw's "Master Page"--folks needing an occasional print shop ready layout can already make do with Draw. As noted, print shop ready layout from the other modules is not well supported. Developing a series of templates for Draw's Master Page composition might be of some help for the average user--but efforts beyond that seem a bit too much of a DTP corner case. Let's continue the discussion in the other ticket. *** This bug has been marked as a duplicate of bug 103683 *** *** Bug 114892 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** *** Bug 114891 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. *** |