![]() ![]() Just remember that in order for the change to take place, you also have to deselect the option Retain Formatting and Contents. Use the menu in the script’s dialog box to choose a different frame type. And here I thought this was going to be a suggestion to set a custom baseline grid (in the Cmd/Control-B aka Text Frame Options dialog, 2nd panel), and then change the Preferences baseline grid to a ridiculous increment (1200pt, etc.) so the document baseline grids never appear. Any shape, even ones you copied and pasted from Illustrator, or drew with the Pen tool will work.Īnd you can make grids of text frames (including the text).Īnd finally, you can change the type of frame when you make the grid. But I think I can also add a few extra points here.įirst of all, why would you want to place multiple copies of an image into a grid of frames? Maybe you need to tweak the size, angle, or position of the images within each frame independently.Īlso notice that you’re not limited to working with rectangular frames. The answer is to use the MakeGrid script that comes with InDesign, and David replied that he had shown how to do this in a previous post. In one of the comments on the post, someone asked if it was possible to place the image into multiple frames (so each independent frame shows a different part of the image). And that also contains the pink Margin Guides. switched to Normal, which covers the entire screen (even the white board) with 1/8' grids/graph paper. ![]() I found Normal and Preview under Screen Mode. Last week I posted a tip about using compound frames to create interesting image effects. But you inspired me to check everything in View. ![]()
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