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Re: crop marks in PDF for printing
From: |
Federico Bruni |
Subject: |
Re: crop marks in PDF for printing |
Date: |
Fri, 04 Nov 2016 12:48:06 +0100 |
Il giorno ven 4 nov 2016 alle 11:56, Henning Hraban Ramm
<address@hidden> ha scritto:
Am 2016-11-03 um 17:22 schrieb Federico Bruni <address@hidden>:
Tomorrow morning I need to print a book and I've just been asked to
add "crop marks" (I think this is the right expression) to the final
PDF. IIUC crop marks are not needed when printing with normal
printers, but it's needed for serious digital and offset printing
machines.
Hi Federico,
even if you could solve the problem, it should not have been
necessary.
Crop marks are not needed for printing, but for cutting the final
product, independent of the printing method.
I have a friend who works as graphic designer and he is taking care of
the printing.
He quickly explained to me that the printshop needs crop marks to cut
the final product. If I've understood correctly, this cutting is needed
when printing on special printers (which I've never seen).
He also said that the "imposition software" (?) needs these crops.
I guess your PDF pages are not bigger than those of your printed book
and you don’t have any elements dangling ("bleeding") over the
edge? Then there is no need for crop marks.
Yes, initially I sent an A4 PDF generated by LilyPond, but my friend
said that it was not correct.
So I made a bigger PDF with crop marks and he said "Ok!".
Even if your PDF pages are bigger than the intended printed pages,
you could easily define "trim box" and "bleed box" of the PDF. A
printshop that cannot handle these nowadays is no serious business.
But then they could do that for you, too.
(BTW I studied typesetter and printing engineer, worked in printshops
for decades.)
Well, I know nothing about it :)
Thanks for sharing this information
Federico