My next step was confirming the layouts of each section, both image based and text, and then carrying out a print test with representations of the coloured stock sections and number of pages that will actually be used to work out binding and cost of print. I went and spoke to James down in Digital Print and because of the quantity of spreads I planned to use I was looking at a final print of around £15-20 not including cost of foiling. This does push it out of my student budget and seen as I initially stated it would be sold RRP at around £20 it doesn't seem worth it. However if I ever did sell it commercially, the cost of producing it in batches would reduce the overall print cost. Anyway I began trimming unnecessary spreads from the layout and then had to ensure the page numbers were a multiple of 4 for booklet production.
Here are the finished, ready to print pages off InDesign (not including blanks):
Section 1 - 8 pages, red stock
Section 2 - 32 pages, matte white stock (can't be glossy as can't print double sided)
Section 3 - 4 pages, blue stock
Section 4 - 36 pages, same white stock
- cut the letter double ups(apart from one M), single image spreads now full bleed, pic of me on my travels filling last page
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