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Category Archives: On-Demand Publishing

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Font classifications: the lowest common denominators

Skilled Workman Posted on August 15, 2012 by David BergslandAugust 15, 2012

A practical list The four basic classifications of all type are: Of course, most of the so-called Decorative fonts are serif or sans. As you can see above, Abiquiu Fiesta is basically a sans serif. Miscellaneous would be a better term. We’ll start with the majority: serif typefaces. Way more than half of all font designs were serif fonts. This overwhelming majority has been diluted a bit by the outpouring of fancy and widely varied scripts in recent … Continue reading →

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Posted in Self-publishing, Typography, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Baskerville, font, font classifications, Garamond, List of typefaces, MyFonts, Sans-serif, serif, Typeface | 1 Reply

Starting at the beginning: Document Setup…

Skilled Workman Posted on August 13, 2012 by David BergslandAugust 13, 2012

This is the dialog box which opens when you choose New from the file menu or type Command+N. Many of the choices found in this dialog box are based on your experience. I’ll use my current choices, just so we can talk about the issues involved. The first choice is that I always start with print chosen as my intent. There are many reasons for this. But I can state it simply as I start out. Print … Continue reading →

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Posted in Author Writing, Book Design, On-Demand Publishing, Self-publishing, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, Amazon, Amazon Kindle, E-book, kindle, Lightning Source, pdf, Portable Document Format, print books, Print on demand, publishing | 1 Reply

Setting up your book to be read: page layout

Skilled Workman Posted on August 6, 2012 by David BergslandAugust 6, 2012

Page layout basics One of the more daunting aspects of book design for the inexperienced is page layout. Most people have Word experience and as I have said countless times already—Word cannot do professional page layout. In fact, it is worse than that because Word’s feeble attempts give you bad habits and poor expectations—which must be corrected. Many settings have to be covered for every document. Many of these are set up as you go through the … Continue reading →

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Posted in Author Writing, Book Design, Recent Posts, Self-publishing, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, Amazon Kindle, epub, file management, GIF, InDesign, JPEG, kindle, page layout, pdf, PNG, Portable Document Format | 1 Reply

What skills are needed to self-publish?

Skilled Workman Posted on July 30, 2012 by David BergslandSeptember 17, 2012

What skills do you need? The idea is that InDesign can be learned and you can become comfortable enough with the software so that it becomes an extension of your creativity. For example, as I started this chapter in the Writing In InDesign book, I hit the shortcut to set my headline. This started the chapter on the next odd page (which is the norm). When I wrote the headline and hit the Return key, InDesign changed to … Continue reading →

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Posted in Author Writing, Book Design, ePUB, Kindle book design, Self-publishing, Typography, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, how do I self-publish, IBook, ibook2, InDesign, IPad, Kindle Fire, Kobo, publishing, Self-publishing, Typography, writing | 2 Replies

An InDesign default paragraph-character styles set

Skilled Workman Posted on July 25, 2012 by David BergslandJune 30, 2017

Setting up an InDesign default paragraph-character styles set as you begin using InDesign THIS IS A PRACTICAL STEP-BY-STEP PROCEDURE FOR WHAT IS DESCRIBED IN ALL MY INDESIGN PRODUCTION BOOKS SINCE 1996. IT’S CURRENTLY CHAPTER 22 IN: Book Publishing With InDesign CC We are going to set up the styles shown in the book. This will give you actual experience in setting up styles. Plus you will begin developing your own personal set of styles—which will become the … Continue reading →

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Posted in Book Design, ePUB, Kindle book design, Self-publishing, Typography, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, character styles, default styles, formatting, justification, Paragraph, paragraph styles, Point (typography) | 2 Replies

Benefits of the new self-publishing paradigm

Skilled Workman Posted on July 23, 2012 by David BergslandJuly 23, 2012

There are many benefits of the new self-publishing options. I’ll cover the financial at the end. It is very fast! One of the real changes in the new paradigm is the speed with which you can release books, booklets, posters, and so on. If you have proofed copy that is ready to format, you can get it published and released in a day or so. The limitation is only your formatting speed. With the techniques and workflow … Continue reading →

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Posted in Ministry, Self-publishing, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, Barnes & Noble, Book, costs of self publishing, Createspace, epub, IBook, InDesign, KDP Select, kobo writing life, lulu, pubit, publishing, Self-publishing, what does it cost to self-publish | Leave a reply

First-line indents and a second interior alignment

Skilled Workman Posted on July 18, 2012 by David BergslandJuly 18, 2012

First-line indents I have briefly touched on first-line indents for body copy paragraphs in talks about styles. This is the preferred method of telling the reader that a new topic sentence is being developed—a new thought expressed. I also mentioned my practice of adding a point or two after paragraphs to help the reader see that first-line indent on a busy page. I realize that this is anathema to many, but they should get a life. If … Continue reading →

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Posted in Book Design, Readability, Recent Posts, Self-publishing, Typography, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Book Design, font, letter spacing, page layout, paragraph design, paragraph styles, Type color, Typography, Word processor | 1 Reply

What is On-Demand publishing?

Skilled Workman Posted on July 16, 2012 by David BergslandJuly 16, 2012

The concept of on-demand publishing is simple The printer or distributor stores the book on their hard drive (server farm). It is printed or downloaded only after it is ordered and paid for. So, unless there is a demand, it is not printed or downloaded. Much like just-in-time manufacturing, your book is delivered upon demand. You upload the digital files: They are stored on the servers of the on-demand printer or ebook distributor. They print the document … Continue reading →

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Posted in Book Design, On-Demand Publishing, Self-publishing, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Amazon, Barnes & Noble, E-book, Fire 10", iPad mini, kindle, Kobo, Nexus, nook, on-demand, print, Print on demand, printing, publishing, Self-publishing, traditional, vanity press | 2 Replies

The use of small caps is required

Skilled Workman Posted on July 11, 2012 by David BergslandJuly 11, 2012

Use small caps. Small caps are a specialized letterform. They are a smaller set of capital letters (often a bit larger than the x-height), used in place of the lowercase letters, which are designed so they have the same color as the rest of the font. Many of the OpenType Pro font families have real small caps. Faux small caps One of the typesetting options in most professional software (and many word processors) has been the use … Continue reading →

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Posted in Book Design, ePUB, Kindle book design, Readability, Recent Posts, Self-publishing, Typography, Writing In InDesign | Tagged All caps, Bringhurst, font, Letter case, lining figures, oldstyle figures, OpenType, small cap figures, small caps, Text figures, true small caps | 1 Reply

Kindle Export Plug-in for InDesign CS6 Released!

Skilled Workman Posted on July 10, 2012 by David BergslandJuly 10, 2012

I probably shouldn’t have put an exclamation mark on the title for I haven’t had a chance to try it yet. I’m still wading through the documentation. But I’ve been waiting for this for a long time. The CS6 plug-in Here’s a quote from their Web page from which you can download the plug-in. Kindle Plugin for Adobe InDesign® (Beta) is officially supported by Amazon to convert files to the Kindle format. We recommend you use Kindle … Continue reading →

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Posted in Book Design, ePUB, Kindle book design, Recent Posts, Self-publishing, Software Review, Writing In InDesign | Tagged Adobe InDesign, Amazon, Amazon Kindle, converting books to ebooks, eb, ebook design, InDesign, kindle, Kindle Fire, Non-Breaking Space, OpenType | 18 Replies

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I rarely use phones.
Email is best: david at bergsland dot org
275 Sandalwood Dr, Rochester, NY 14616
This site uses the pseudonyms of Bergsland Design for design work; and Radiqx Press for publishing. Both of these have been used for some time beginning in the past millennium. The Skilled Workman was begun in 2011 dealing with spiritual teachings about our Messiah and the Holy Spirit he sent to us to help us. If you want to meet Jesus, click here.

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