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Using bleeds will increase your cost.
Why? Because a printing press needs small margins (or gripper space) on
the edge of each sheet so it can grip the paper and feed it through the
machine. As a result, we must use a sheet of paper that is larger than
the page size in order to print ink beyond the edge. Once the oversized
sheet is printed, it is then trimmed to final page size, giving the
appearance of colors or images extending to the paper's edge. Due to the
larger sheet of paper and extra labor involved in cutting and trimming,
a project using bleeds is more expensive.
Full and Partial Bleeds:
Sometimes
you may wish to extend bleeds to every edge of your document. This is
called "Full-Bleed" artwork. Look at the sample business card to the
right. The image of the light bulb goes beyond the top, bottom and left
sides of the card, while the black background extends to the top, bottom
and right edges. Every side has a bleed.
You may only want an image or color to cross only one or two sides of
your document. This is a "Partial-Bleed." Because the process is the
same, you will usually be charged the same price for full- or
partial-bleeds
Most desktop publishing programs will permit you to create bleeds
simply by extending your images, lines or colors past the edges of the
page. Here at Affordable Image, we require a
1/8" bleed past the edge of page.
Live Area:
Wether your project is full-bleed or is
non-bleed, you always need to keep aware of the live area, or the safe
printing zone. This is the area that will be safe from variations in the
cutting and bindery process. To ensure that you stay within this area,
do not place any important items closer than 1/8 inch to the edge of the
page. If you have straight lines or shapes that run parallel to the
page, please leave 1/4 from the edge.
Here is a basic diagram demonstrating how you should build your
artwork if you want any colors or images to extend to the edge of the
page:

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