|
Post by Reivaj on Nov 14, 2013 15:22:07 GMT -9
|
|
|
Post by WackyAnne on Nov 15, 2013 4:58:13 GMT -9
I would if I didn't already have a set already!
However, that reminds me I have to tell you that the figures are set too low on the page to print out properly, at least in US Letter format. In the Ant Warriors set, pages 2 and 3, the top of the edge of the ants, and most of the cutfile registration marks are out of the printable area. And that's even with my printer settings defaulting to 91% to try to get the full sheet on there. It didn't bother at first, per se, because I was printing at 2/3rd size to go along with the Child Adventurers, but it will prevent me from printing them out full-size until I shift them in GIMP. There doesn't appear to be any problem with the cover, bases, or instruction pages however. Maybe it was something that happened when you got the cutfiles set up? Or perhaps because it's formatted for A4 and not US Letter?
|
|
|
Post by Reivaj on Nov 15, 2013 14:35:24 GMT -9
Maybe that's the problem. All my sets are set to A4,US letter is not used in Argentina
|
|
|
Post by WackyAnne on Nov 15, 2013 14:56:29 GMT -9
A4 297 x 210 mm 11.7 x 8.3 in
US Letter 279.4 x 215.9 mm 11 x 8.5 inches
You are better off planning for US Letter size for formatting. Few publishers use the full width, but most use the full length, and US Letter's quite a bit shorter. I usually can squeeze 8 x 10" usuable area out of my files, but don't often try for more beyond that. Your files would be fine if the figure pages were up a centimeter or so...
I wish Canada used A4 (as it is an international standard, and actually makes sense in a series of paper sizes), but like much else, we follow the US.
Conversion from Imperial to Metric measures happened 40 years ago, but except for temperature, you're as likely to hear Imperial as Metric measures for things (esp. products like food, etc. where the companies are HQ'd in the US.)
|
|