Designing DVD Booklet Printer Spreads
Figuring out the
correct page sequencing when designing your DVD booklet can
be rather confusing for inexperienced designers or if you've never
done it before. Sometimes there's a big difference between what
'looks right' and what is 'actually right', and this information
on creating Printer Spreads will point you in the correct
direction.
If you’d like to add printed biographical information or song
lyrics to your DVD manufacturing project or DVD duplication
project you will likely need to incorporate a DVD booklet into
your budget and designs.
Booklets tend to be more popular than “folders” because we’re much
more accustomed to the page turning format of the booklet. Just
like a book or magazine, a booklet is folded in half and is
stapled in the middle, so they are very compact and easy to browse
through.
Printer Spread Page Sequencing
Designing the booklet for your DVD manufacturing project or DVD
duplication project shares many of the same design rules that
apply to every other aspect of your project, but there is one
commonly overlooked aspect we want to bring to your attention:
Printer Spreads.
Through a whole lifetime of familiarity with books and magazines
we know that ‘page 3’ comes after ‘page 2’ and then ‘page 4’ comes
after ‘page 3’. This is absolutely correct after a book has been
printed, cut, assembled and stitched but you actually have to
design it counter-intuitively.
For the purposes of your DVD manufacturing project or DVD
duplication project your ‘booklet’ is a series of 2 panel folders
that are stacked together, stapled and then folded to create the
book. There is a specific page order required to assure the
booklet has the correct page sequence after it has been assembled,
and this sequence (or page order) is referred to as Printer
Spreads.
Create A Mock-Up
The best way for you to see this is to make a Printer Spread
mock-up of something simple. Here’s how you can create a Printer
Spread mock-up of a 4 panel (8 page) booklet using two pieces of
scrap paper:
-
Stack two pieces of
paper together (face to face).
-
Fold the stack evenly
in half.
-
Put a staple in the fold
to keep the two pieces of paper together as to create a booklet.
-
Number each page
beginning with the front cover as ‘page 1’.
-
After you’ve finished
remove the staple and take the booklet apart.
If you’ve done this
correctly you should have a total of eight pages that relate to each
other as follows: [Page 8 - Page 1], [Page 2 - Page 7], [Page 6 - Page
3] and then [Page 4 - Page 5].
What is "Reader Spread"
Page Sequencing?
Now having said all of that, and we don’t want to confuse you, but it is
important that you know the difference between Printer Spreads and “Reader
Spreads”.
Due to the counter-intuitive page sequence involved with Printer Spreads
it’s easy to image that proofing a large booklet for your DVD
manufacturing project or DVD duplication project could get rather
confusing.
“Reader Spreads” can be
created so the pages are formatted in the same intuitive way that the
“reader” would experience them when viewing the finished booklet (after
the booklet was assembled and stitched).
As you will have learned
from creating your mock-up, while “Reader Spreads” are all well and good
for viewing the pages in a more true-to-life manner you cannot use
Reader Spread page sequencing for printing or the end result will be a
booklet that has pages out of order. |