Great video, just what I needed starting out. One question. For setting Left/Right gutters for multiple pages, instead of messing with the Header Settings "Different Odd & Even Pages," why not back in the Layout/Margins/Page Setup window Margins Tab, under Pages where it says Multiple pages, just set that to Mirror Margins?
Wow, I never thought about any of that. I don't use word, but I was curious how this would work in other software. In Affinity Publisher you set up a Master Page as a 2 page spread, and then set the inner and outer margins. Adobe InDesign uses the gutter value for the space between 2 columns of text, and just the inner and outer margins. Now I know. Thanks Lisa!
Great video
Finally! Someone with a clue that explained things clearly. Hallelujah
I'm glad to be a help :). Book gutters are fairly foundational to book layout.
thank you, great, straightforward video.
I'm glad you found it useful!
Great video, just what I needed starting out. One question. For setting Left/Right gutters for multiple pages, instead of messing with the Header Settings "Different Odd & Even Pages," why not back in the Layout/Margins/Page Setup window Margins Tab, under Pages where it says Multiple pages, just set that to Mirror Margins?
This was so clear and and to the point! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge!
I'm glad to be a help!
Thank you so much! You are a gem!
You are welcome!
Very helpful! Thank you!
I'm glad you enjoyed it! Knowing how to work with gutters is a key part of publishing physical books.
Thank you so very much! I am creating my first poetry book and this has helped me immensely.
Good luck with the book!
@@workfromhomelisashea Thank you!!
@@workfromhomelisashea thank you 👍
❤
Wow, I never thought about any of that. I don't use word, but I was curious how this would work in other software. In Affinity Publisher you set up a Master Page as a 2 page spread, and then set the inner and outer margins. Adobe InDesign uses the gutter value for the space between 2 columns of text, and just the inner and outer margins. Now I know. Thanks Lisa!