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1. Re: Printing design?
P Spier Jun 15, 2014 10:46 AM (in response to NDCtour)What do you see when you turn on Preview mode?
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2. Re: Printing design?
NDCtour Jun 15, 2014 11:09 AM (in response to P Spier)Thanks for getting back to me. I will further explain my problem...
I am a photographer, I have designed a menu for a restaurant. I have text boxes and I have graphics boxes. I need to print this to show to the customer where the images will go, so they can assign numbers and menu items for the photo shoot. I try to print this and I cannot get the boxes to appear.
Preview mode shows the same as printed.. no boxes.
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3. Re: Printing design?
Ellis home Jun 15, 2014 11:26 AM (in response to NDCtour)By default, image and text frames have no border. With the frames selected you can add stroke weight on the top menu or Window/Stroke.
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4. Re: Printing design?
NDCtour Jun 15, 2014 12:05 PM (in response to Ellis home)Ok, I guess there is no way to print the rectangle box with x. If I change the border, it will have only a border but no x, correct?
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5. Re: Printing design?
Ellis home Jun 15, 2014 12:09 PM (in response to NDCtour)That's correct. If you want an x you'll have to add it.
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6. Re: Printing design?
NDCtour Jun 15, 2014 12:22 PM (in response to Ellis home)I used an adobe program before, about 12 years ago. We would print the copy and then crop the images manually, then scan the images and have one guy crop all the images with the crop marks with photoshop. I know it isn't the way things are done now, but this would be very helpful. If I see it on the screen, why can't I print it exactly like that. (without using zapgrab or the snipping tool)
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7. Re: Printing design?
Ellis home Jun 15, 2014 12:49 PM (in response to NDCtour)You can avoid adding stroke weight by using the Rectangle Tool (instead of Rectangle Frame Tool). But for the x you'll have to add two diagonal lines.
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8. Re: Printing design?
P Spier Jun 15, 2014 2:19 PM (in response to NDCtour)It's pretty normal in mockup work to either use an actual placeholder image, or use a 10-20% gray fill in placeholder image frames.



