Brochures are small, usually folded documents used to inform, educate, or persuade the reader. They are commonly used to promote organizations, products,.
In case someone else looking for this the way is to:Different First Page and Odd/Even Headers and FootersCreate a new Word document by clicking New on the Standard toolbar.Insert two page breaks by pressing CTRL+ENTER twice. This creates a three-page document.Position the insertion point on page one by pressing CTRL+HOME.On the View menu, click Header and Footer.Click Page Setup on the Header and Footer toolbar.Select the Layout tab.Select the Different odd and even and Different first page check boxes. In the Section start list, select New page, and then click OK.
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I recommend him to anyone! This is fantastic! Thanks so much. Quick question: If I’m designing a letterhead (without a full bleed) for a client who will be printing with Word in house, is there a recommendation for how much “margin” or gripper edge should I allow for on the top and bottom? How far should the address, website, etc. Be from the bottom of the page? Thanks for your help, Rebecca (or anyone)!.I’ve usually thought.25 inch was pretty standard, but it seems Word suggests that.6 inch from the bottom will be cut off.
How to make a full bleed PDF from WordNow here’s something that has always annoyed me (which doesn’t annoy me anymore, because I just figured out Googled a fix)Whenever I have formatted an ebook in Word, I’ve always had a problem with the borders when I save to PDF. For instance, I’ll have a nice beautiful ebook cover that will appear to be edge-to-edge in Word, but when I save to PDF, I get a super ugly white border around the edge. (That’s the non-printable area, BTW. It’s where your typical home printer just can’t put ink.)HOWEVER, when I’m developing an ebook, most people will view it online, so I want the pretty appearance of a bleed. Here’s how you fix it (in Word 2010 I’m sure it’s similar for the Windows version).Select File Page SetupIn the Paper Size dropdown menu, chose Manage Custom SizesClick on the “+” sign and type a descriptive name, like “Edge to edge”Under Non-Printable Area, choose User DefinedEnter zero for all margin valuesWa-la!
– Thanks to Daniel G. Grau (whoever you actually are) on the Microsoft forum for your post!
Great tutorial but I just have to offer a bit of advice for people using Word 2013 on Microsoft operating systems. I had problems trying to fit the header and footer of the template within the confines of the header and footer section in word without the template actually being pushed down the page! The template would fly off the grid and would seriously drive me bonkers.
In order to prevent such madness read on:After fitting your template fully on the page go to “Insert” then click Header. After clicking Header go down and you’ll see a “Save Selection to Header Gallery”, click on it, then word will automatically recognize the header of your template as a header and save it in the header gallery. Repeat the process also for the footer. After that you can easily tweak the header and footer borders by entering numbers in the “Header From Top” and “Footer From Bottom” boxes without your template actually shifting off from the page.Also format issues, be sure to save your file as a “dotx” file, which is the latest Microsoft office template file, “dot” formats are mostly used for fixing compatibility issues when you want to use your template in older version of Office. Now open a new file and you can easily spot your template in the “Personal” section beside “Featured”. If it’s not there then open File, Options, on the left section there is a series of options, go to Save. After clicking on save on the right you’ll see a series of options to the right.
Check and see whether the “Default personal templates location” field is empty. If it’s empty then enter the location of where you keep your template files, on Microsoft OS it’s mostly saved in the Libraries—Documents—-Custom Office Templates section by default.
Enter the address in the empty field then click OK. Close word and run it again, this time you should see your template ready in the “Personal” section.