<!DOCTYPE html> <!DOCTYPE html> <html> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>Tasks of the Contingent Librarian</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="tasks.css"> <script src="tasks.js"></script> </head> <body> <div class="card"><DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT><div class="mw-parser-output"><h1><span class="mw-headline" id="reprinting">reprinting</span><span class="mw-editsection"><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">[</span><a href="/mw-mediadesign/index.php?title=User:Simon/Reprinting&action=edit&section=1" title="Edit section: reprinting">edit</a><span class="mw-editsection-bracket">]</span></span></h1> <p>see also <a href="Being_kind_to_the_reader.html" title="User:Simon/Being kind to the reader">being kind to the reader</a>, <a href="Bootlegging.html" title="User:Simon/Bootlegging">bootlegging</a>, <a href="Rebinding.html" title="User:Simon/Rebinding">rebinding</a>, <a href="Republishing.html" title="User:Simon/Republishing">republishing</a> </p><p>Making a printed book involves selection of paper stock and decisions on how to economise with the printing method. Often this calls for text to be imposed, 2-up, double-sided, into a booklet. Booklets are useful for thin, staple-bound books, less than 64 pages of ordinary 80gsm paper. </p><p>A text block of 2-up imposed spreads is cut in the middle first, then the two halves are joined together like a sandwich. Turning a single page document into a 2-up imposed PDF also imposes a constraint. There is no other way to create the text block. So, a book made in this way will result in a visible “split”, and the pages will naturally fall open where the two halves were joined. </p><p>This is because most commercially bought paper comes with the grain direction aligned with the long edge, not the short edge. The solution is to print pages, not spreads, 1-up, double sided on a page. If you can find a printer that takes sheets of paper smaller than A4 (such as A5) this is perfect, if not, you may have to concede the loss that comes from trimming down to a smaller than A5 size. Although this may seem just a superficial concern, the book will not be split, making for a materiality that emphasises the unity of the text. </p><p>Image: (clockwise from top left): imposition from a single-page PDF into a booklet, anatomy of a book, a spread </p> <!-- NewPP limit report Cached time: 20200619191757 Cache expiry: 86400 Dynamic content: false CPU time usage: 0.004 seconds Real time usage: 0.004 seconds Preprocessor visited node count: 2/1000000 Preprocessor generated node count: 8/1000000 Post‐expand include size: 0/2097152 bytes Template argument size: 0/2097152 bytes Highest expansion depth: 2/40 Expensive parser function count: 0/100 Unstrip recursion depth: 0/20 Unstrip post‐expand size: 0/5000000 bytes --> <!-- Transclusion expansion time report (%,ms,calls,template) 100.00% 0.000 1 -total --> <!-- Saved in parser cache with key wdka_mw_mediadesign-mw_:pcache:idhash:31440-0!canonical and timestamp 20200619191757 and revision id 173940 --> </div></DOCUMENT_FRAGMENT></div> </body> </html>