Imposition: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
* [https://wiki.scribus.net/canvas/How_to_make_a_booklet How to make a booklet with psutils] (at Scribus wiki) | * [https://wiki.scribus.net/canvas/How_to_make_a_booklet How to make a booklet with psutils] (at Scribus wiki) | ||
==Examples | ==Examples & boilerplates== | ||
* Example of an impositioned PDF for booklet printing: [[:File:Wiki-wiki-book.pdf]] | * Example of an impositioned PDF for booklet printing: [[:File:Wiki-wiki-book.pdf]] |
Revision as of 13:14, 3 October 2023
There are many ways to do imposition!
Imposition tools
- Manual way: CTRL+P, write the order of printing in the field "Pages"
- psutil (Python)
- pdfbook2 (CLI, part of the texlive-extra-utils in Debian)
- pdfjam (CLI, part of the texlive-extra-utils in Debian)
- pdfxup (CLI, part of the texlive-extra-utils in Debian)
- podofo + documentation from 75 (CLI)
- BookletImposer (GUI)
- jPDF Tweak (GUI)
- pdfcpu (CLI)
Tutorials
- How to make a booklet with psutils (at Scribus wiki)
Examples & boilerplates
- Example of an impositioned PDF for booklet printing: File:Wiki-wiki-book.pdf
- make_booklet.sh, by Yann Trividic
- Paged.js imposition "extension", by Quentin Juhel and Julien Taquet
Traces of SI5
Clone imposition script from the scan-utils. git clone https://git.xpub.nl/repos/scan-utils.git
How to program an imposition of different images (of different ratios and orientations) into a single sheet of paper? Creating a Print Signature?
same size source images
Imagemagick is a powerful tool to perform all sorts of manipulations on images, and one that affords many options concerning resizing.
How to resizes images which we want in the imposition onto files of the same dimensions? Taking into consideration the images':
- have different ratios and orientations,
- should not be cropped or distorted .
One option that seems to work is to place the images onto frames of the same size.
For creatime same size frames Imagemagick provides the -extent
operator, which adjusts the final size of an image , without resizing it.
But According to IM documentation, "[i]f the image size increases, space will be added to right or bottom edges of the image. If it decreases the image data is just junked or cropped to fit the new image size."
convert -background black -extent 297x421 -gravity Center input.jpg output.jpg
If the input image
- is larger than 297x421 you'll get a cropped image,
- is smaller than 297x421 space will be added to right or bottom edges of the image.
-gravity
defines where the center of the image should be. Possible values: Center
North
, South
, East
, West
As cropping or junking the image is something we want to avoid, a solution might be to also resize the image to the same dimensions given to -extent
using the -resize
parameter
convert -background black original.jpeg -gravity Center -resize 297x421 -extent 297x421 extend_297x421.jpeg
To perform that operation in all images of a directory, we can use a for loop:
for i in dir/*; do convert -background black $i -gravity Center -resize 297x421 -extent 297x421 extent_$i;done
Imagemagick: Montage
After resizing all images, the next step, towards the imposition, is to use those images to create a mosaic using the IM montage command.
It is useful to look at the bash script featured in this Scribus page on imposition to get a few hints on how this is done. Although programming such a task in bash is a daring and messy job :).
In its simplest form a 4x2 montage can be invoked with:
montage -geometry +1+1 -tile 4x2 01.png 02.png 03.png 04.png 05.png 06.png 07.png 08.png 4x2.jpg
-geometry '+1+1'
defines the spacing between tiles:+from_left_to_right+from_top_to_bottom
-tile 4x2
: how the tiled images are to be laid out
Imagemagick Montage: Order & Rotation
Notice that the distribution of tiles goes from top left to bottom right. Such order, wont result in a correct page ordering when folded into a booklet.
To achieve the correct page ordering for the book let we'll have to provide the order:
- single-side:
[3, 6, 5, 4, 2, 7, 8, 1]
- double-sided:
[5, 12, 9, 8, 4, 13, 16], [1, 7, 10, 11, 6, 2, 15, 14, 3]
montage -geometry +1+1 -tile 4x2 03.png 06.png 05.png 04.png 02.png 07.png 08.png 01.png 4x2_order.jpg
As the top part of the imposition sheet will be folded down, its content will be inverted in the booklet. To correct that we can rotate the uppper 4 tiles 180 degrees with -rotate 180
.
montage -geometry +1+1 -tile 4x2 \( -rotate 180 03.png 06.png 05.png 04.png \) 02.png 07.png 08.png 01.png 4x2_top180.jpg
page size
If IM's identify
is asked provide to give information on A4 and A3 pdfs: identify A4.pdf
. I will get the following reply:
- A4 210x297mm 8.3x11.7inch 2480x3508px (at 300 dpi) 595x842 (at 72dpi)
- A3 297x420mm 11.7x16.5inch 3508x4960px (at 300 dpi) 842x1191px (at 72dpi)
Note the size in pixels changes when in relation to the resolution: 300 or 72 pdi.
The resulting value is nothing more than: page_height_inches*resolution X page_height_inches*resoltuion
(8.3inch * 300dpi) X (11.7inch * 300dpi) = 2480x3508px
More of paper sizes in inch,mm,px: http://www.papersizes.org/a-paper-sizes.htm
convert to page size
After creating the montage with the same ratio as A4 & A3 the next step will be convert it to a PDF with the right dimensions PDF, so it can be sent to the printer.
convert 4x2.jpg -gravity Center -resize 3508x2480 -units PixelsPerInch -density 300x300 4x2_a4_300dpi.pdf
Produces a PDF with 3508x2480px and 11.6x8.26inch
-units
specifies the units of image resolution: Undefined, PixelsPerInch, or PixelsPerCentimete-density
specifies the resoltion-gravity Center
resize gravity point
pstop
pstops (included in the PsUtils package) seems to allow the creation of imposition pdfs from linear PDFs, however the process is intricate and far from obvious
- Scribus wiki: How to make impositions with pstops
- Making booklets from PDF files using psbook and psnup
Bibliography
Johansson, Kay; Lundberg, Peter. Robert Ryberg, ed. A Guide to Graphic Print Production. Wiley.