elfs: (Default)
[personal profile] elfs
One of the things that I've been wracking my brains over is simply, how am I going to convert The Journal Entries into a collection of PDFs, or a compiled PDF? I thought about attacking it old-school, by actually doing all of the wrapper work in LaTeX[?], but converting and embedding fonts and styles and, especially, sidebars and decorations is such a pain in the neck, especially since I don't know LaTeX all that well.

But... I can do WYSIWG[?] programming, and I know Python[?]. Enter Scribus, a fully scriptable and externally drivable program that can easily handle all of the commands I want to issue as commands, not some freakin' "memorize what I do" macros that then have to be edited in some language nobody understands.

Better yet, the text frames are linkable and will tell you when you've ceased overflow. So it's possible to cast alternating pages succesfully, and detect when you've cast the last page, adjust it appropriately, and see if there's enough room for the copyright notice and colophon and, if so, fit it in or generate a new page for the material. And it's all in python, so it'll be straightforwrd for me to code.

Sweet! Put it in a loop and leave it all night (believe me, it'll take a while to do this for all the stories) and viola', sexy PDFs ready to go.

Now, I just have to code it up. "Just." Yeah, right.

Note that I tend to believe that PDFs are primarily for printing. Given that, are there any PDF documents you've seen that you've really enjoyed reading? That, from a design perspective, made you happy to print and read them?

Date: 2006-09-01 11:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] klrmn.livejournal.com
a long long time ago, i thought to myself "you know, i'd really like to have a bound copy of the Journal Entries". thus far it still hasn't happened, because i am too lazy to go through and print each of the documents seperately, and don't really have a good plan for binding it into some convenient size.

but i'm very happy to continue reading new stories as they come out.

Date: 2006-09-02 03:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] velvet-wood.livejournal.com
Pretty easy to make bound books from regular printouts. Works better if you have a duplex printer, of course, otherwise things are even bulkier. Even best is if you can find a source for trade-paperback sized paper, so that it's not always scrapbook sized, but it's still pretty readable even with single-sided regular sized paper.

Take 1 to 1 1/2 inch stack of your printout. Cut sheet of posterboard in half, trim to fit wrapped around your printout with a couple inches overlap. Use a long flatedge to carefully crease this 'cover' to square it off good for the back binding. Next step takes a couple of bricks, a couple of c-clamps, an oven, a cookie sheet, and some kind of meltable glue. Gluesticks _will_ work, but don't work well. What we found that worked best are old-fashioned glue strips, about half an inch wide and 3/16 thick.

Set your cover on the table, back binding against the surface, and put a line of solid glue pieces from top to bottom, except for about an inch at either end. Use the bricks to prop the binding up on the cookie sheet so that it's standing up, the glue end down, and put it in the oven just until the glue's melted. (oven temp need to be low, no more than about 200F, and be sure it doesn't brush the oven sides, or it can still catch on fire). Should take about five minutes. Carefully remove, set on solid flat surface. Make sure your sheaf of paper is all neatly tapped down (and maybe clamped near the bottom), then carefully slide into the cover and press the inner edge firmly into the glue. Don't let the paper fan out while you're doing this, or it'll be all lumpy and weird. A good way to ensure it doesn't fan is to use two long flat pieces of wood or metal, clamped firmly about an inch from the edge. Hold in place for half a minute or so while the glue sets and cools enough that it won't burn you, then lift the whole thing, tap the flat of the bound side hard against the table and rub it smooth, then lay it flat and use something heavy to smooth the top, then the bottom along where it's bound. Trim any glue from the top and bottom edge, then trim the cover as much as you like. If things didn't set quite right, you can always pop the whole thing back in the oven (but clamp it at top and bottom, so things don't shift out of place) and remelt the glue enough to neaten it up. Once it's done, you can use transparent 'instant laminating' sheets to toughen it up, maybe applying a suitable picture to the front cover and any text you want to print out for the back or binding first.

Blech... that sound more complicated than it is. Really, it's not much trouble, and you can get a good-sized volume made in about 15 minutes total. Having two people helps, but isn't a necessity. It took us half an hour to think up the idea, a couple of tries (no more than another hour) to figure out what worked best, and after that we never had any problems. We made about a dozen 'books' that way, and they turned out to be tougher than you'd ever imagine. Several very book-abusive years later, they're still intact, and that's without reinforcing the covers (I didn't actually like the books, so I wasn't willing to contribute any artistic effort, you see) or anything. Once, some pages did start to loosen, but it was on one of the first ones we did, and I think we just didn't have enough glue. Popping it in the oven and resetting it fixed the problem easily (incidentally, that works for regular paperbacks that are coming loose from their covers, too). Anyway, it makes nice, neat volumes out of printouts.

Profile

elfs: (Default)
Elf Sternberg

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 12345 6
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Dec. 31st, 2025 08:48 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios