#<- that's half joking. I can easily imagine someone not liking my specific fanfiction it's very much to my own tastes and you're allowed to
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got struck with the urge to re-read a section of my enchanted chronicles fanfic and then got sucked into it. I have to stop and go to bed but. Ahhh I'm so happy. This is what successful writing is to me you know? Something I re-read and don't want to put down. It just really makes me smile
#anyway if you HAVE read the Enchanted Forest Chronicles and you have NOT read my fic - why not? Go remedy that!#<- that's half joking. I can easily imagine someone not liking my specific fanfiction it's very much to my own tastes and you're allowed to#not want to read it#the enchanted forest chronicles
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āShould I use InDesign to lay out my books?ā - A Passionate Guide
Ok, if you are like me, you recently stumbled upon @armoredsuperheavyāās brilliant blog about bookbinding and fanfiction, and now you are excited to throw yourself head-first into bookbinding.
This also means that you are about to invest a fair amount of time into figuring out how exactly to lay out books. What you end up getting comfortable with will most likely be what you end up using long term, so it is worthwhile giving it some thought. The question really comes down to this: who's name will you be cursing for the foreseeable future? Adobe? Or Microsoft?
Full disclosure: I only started using InDesign because I was forced to. I worked as an editor at a newspaper, and that was what we used. The beginning was hell. I wonāt sugar coat it, it sucks. In the end it was worth it. Once you figure it out, InDesignās potential far outstrips Microsoft Word (in my opinion).
That encouragement means very little when you open this treacherous program for the first time and see THIS:
āWhat?! I will literally give you $100 if you guess what all the buttons on the left are for. How the fuck do I make the margins disappear!?ā
So, if using InDesign means figuring out what at least one third of the tools on the left are for, lets talk pros and cons.
Letās get the cons out of the way.
It is expensive. Adobe is not fucking around. This puppy costs 20 bucks a month (Canadian) to RENT. If this is out of your price range, do you still have options? Yes. Do they range in legality? Also yes. I think I could potentially get in trouble for telling you to find your friendly neighborhood torrenting site and steal this software. I will say, outright, that no one should steal software ever. Got it? I would be very upset if someone were to message me for specifics. As you naturally wish to be law-abiding, there is also the quasi-legal option of repeating the 14-day free trial. My friend works at a professional print studio in Russia, and this is the tactic they use: every 14 days they uninstall all of the software from all of the computers, and reinstall it with a new trial. Every 14 days! At a professional operation! My friend hates working there.
It is not initially intuitive. Iāve covered this, but it bears repeating because it is a serious hurdle. Keep in mind, that with time, InDesign becomes more helpful than other software. Now when I use Word I find myself reaching for keyboard shortcuts automatically, and feeling bereft at the lack of my favorite tools. Nonetheless, expect a time commitment up front learning how to harness this glorious and confusing computer program.
It can run kinda slowly, depending on your computer. Up until two months ago, I had the worldās most precarious laptop. I bought it for $200 in 2015. It once took half an hour to restart. Inexplicably, when it got stressed, it would switch to Spanish. It was literally and figuratively falling apart. And yet, it ran InDesign. Granted, it worked slowly. If I asked it to process too many images at once it would panic (again with the Spanish), but for the most part, it worked. If you have a slow computer and are patient, then InDesign will probably work fine on your computer. If you are not willing to suffer, stick to Word.
You will also need Photoshop (sometimes). Part of what makes InDesign glorious is that it is professional software that is designed specifically to work with print and anything text-heavy. I love that about it. It even manages to do some handy things with images! But, inevitably, you will need to learn some Photoshop to punch up your graphics. I have, admittedly, only learned the bare minimum Photoshop in order to feed my InDesign addiction. It was a pain in the butt. For example, inexplicably, Adobe has not standardized keyboard shortcuts across the suite. As with InDesign, now that Iāve learned the tricks, I adore it. But you should go into this knowing that with Adobe, the fun never ends.
Printing signatures is the WORST. Adobe, please explain to me, in front of God and everyone, why the hell you would make this software specifically for laying out books etc. and not include a method of printing signatures?! Iām livid. This is absolutely where Word wins the day. It is almost worth using Word just to print the signatures so nicely and easily. Iām not kidding. Meāa person who has used InDesign professionallyāalmost wanted to switch software entirely just because of this. Hands down, InDesignās biggest goof. Despite this crime against bookbinders everywhere, you have options. You can export your design to a PDF and literally print each signature separately (I am fucking livid) or you can complain enough to your friends that they offer to buy you a lovely program called BookletCreator for your birthday. It costs $20 bucks USD and it was worth every penny. However, Adobe, FOR THE AMOUNT THAT YOU CHARGE FOR YOUR PROGRAM, I SHOULD NOT HAVE TO PURCHASE ANY ADDITIONAL SOFTWARE IN ORDER TO PRINT MY BOOK. Did I mention that I am livid?!
But InDesign must be worth something, right?! Otherwise why would I be writing a long post encouraging people to use it? Letās talk pros:
The horsepower on this baby will blow your mind. Forget what I just said about printing signatures; imagine using software that was literally made for this. You wanna do a thing? InDesign has got you. Are you a perfectionist? This software was designed by people as pedantic and obsessive as yourself. It gets you. Dream it, google how to do it, and InDesign will deliver. This is really the main reason to use InDesign; it is the professional standard for a reason.
There are so SO many resources available to help you learn. Almost everything Iāve learned about InDesign I learned from Google or YouTube. Honestly, if you have a question, I promise that other people have already asked and answered it. The advantage is that because this software is specifically for laying out books, there is lots of information available specifically about how to do what you want to do. (This may also be true for Word, but Iāll be honest, I only used Word for a book layout once, so I canāt say for certain either way.)
Once you figure it out, InDesign will give you back hours of your life. Things like master page spreads, clipping paths, tint, the eyedropper tool, and the one-hundred-percent adjustable text are just... lifesavers. My experience with Word is limited, so my frustration using it was probably due to my own ineptitude, but honestly, when putting together my thesis, the tears I cried trying to get page numbers to format correctly were some of the most bitter text-related tears I have ever shed. I can take care of the whole operation in InDesign in a matter of minutes. Hours. Of. My. Life. Saved.
This is an actual marketable skill. Ok, bear with me here. I have used InDesign for every single job I have had since I worked at the newspaper. That includes working as a bookkeeper and a kindergarten teacher. Hell, I even made my resume to get those jobs in InDesign. There is no job that I forsee in my future that doesnāt include some form of text-based design. Even when my work has absolutely nothing to do with layout (see: kindergarten teacher) I still found some way to use it. My previous boss was actually so thrilled about my InDesign skills that she had me run a 101 seminar for the other employees. (Did any of them end up using it? I suspect not. Did they look at me strangely for being so enthusiastic about design software? Absolutely.) Iāve even managed to use InDesign to branch out from freelance editing to take on design projects as well. In short: if you learn how to use InDesign, put in on your resume. You will be surprised at how much mileage you get out of it.
With Adobe, the fun never ends. I know I joked about it before, but really, I love seeing what this program has in store for me next. For example, thanks to bookbinding, I discovered that InDesign will do a lot of things that I had previously assumed were the domain of Word, such as spell check. I literally stumbled onto a measuring tool today that I wish existed irl to help me glue my covers together. Part of the beauty of this software being so intricate is that there is always something new you can do. I love learning how to harness a new feature, and then watch my design improve over time. Using this program you really get the feeling that the sky is the limit. Look, just the fact that Iāve now resorted to saccharine platitudes about computer software tells you that InDesign is remarkable. Considering that this program has made me suffer so significantly, I have either seen the face of God, or I have Stockholm syndrome. Take your pick.
TL;DR, at long last:
How complicated would you like to go? Either way, for bookbinding youāve got to learn to use software in a new way.
Do you just want to get your book laid out reliably with little fuss? Word is for you! Are you interested in delving into the details? Do you have the patience of a saint? Try InDesign!
Both work. Both are good. But you can pry InDesign from my cold dead hands because I adore it.
#Honestly#No shame towards Word or anyone that uses it seriously#Like I said I have little experience actually using it for laying out books#But InDesign is very good.#Bookbinding#fic#fic binding#If people want I can start putting together tutorials about how to do all of this stuff#And all of y'all can learn from my mistakes and hopefully learn faster than I did.#ŠŠ½Ń ŠµŃŃŃ ŃŃŠ¾ Š½ŠøŠ±ŃŠ“Ń Š·Š“ŠµŃŃ ŠæŃŠ¾ ŃŠµŠ±Ń#Š·Š°Š¼ŠµŃŠøŃŃ?#InDesign
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I guess i wasnt very clear. Easy to seem angry over the internet unintentionally. I mean to say; rebs url (a small thing) represented something to us. Xe left and we all really miss xer. Xe mattered to us and was a special part of tjlc. 1/8
In many peoples eyes this is an aggressive act. Im sure that you can see at least a little how we would see it that way. 2/8
I wasnt implying that you are not queer or that i hate queers. i was saying that, this is the internet, im not going to always believe everything everyone tells me. 3/8
Most queers i know, try and stick together despite our differences. And the fact that you seem very angry (could be reading into it) at a group of people who are predominately queer tells me that you COULD be something other than queer. 4/8
As you yourself said this is just a tv show...but its more than that isnt it? Why you spend so much thought throwing shade at rebs or the tjlcers or whoever, tells me that theres something else going on and that it is important. 5/8
banding together with like-minded people is the solution to the political shitfest we are in. I'd like to think that we could work thru our differences to reach our common goals assuming, we have common goals. (if im wrong, please let me know) 6/8
I dont see myself as a victim, im only sad. not in a pitying way. Its hard to describe. You were probably the victim of an angry tjlcer on here or witnessed the chaos and theres really no excuse for hatefullness (im admonishing my own camp here). 7/8
debate, yes, but never being mean just to be mean. That doesnt get anyone anywhere. I hope this makes sense and im not trying to offend you. I just think life is too short to hate. And its sad that there has been much on here. 8/8
Iām actually not angry, I think itās all kinda funny. Though I do try my best to respond seriously to serious messages. TheĀ āgo fuck yourselfās will always be met with aĀ āsounds good,ā but when someone takes the time to send a message like this, I tend to pay attention. Anyways...
First you say youāre not going to always believe everything everyone tells you, then you turn around and say that the tj//lc group is predominantly queer.Ā Whoās telling you that? Hard evidence? Demographics data? A census taken by a neutral third party to determine age range and sexuality, and what direction they believe the show should go? As I answered someone before: anecdotal evidence isĀ inadmissibleĀ in science and court for a reason.Ā Of course since youāreĀ a lesbian (a factoid gleaned from your profile, but if this is inaccurate, please inform me. But I could easily say youāre not, but I donāt,Ā because when someone tells me theyāre queer, I believe them, who the hell wants to be in a [most places on the globe] hated minority? [by āhated,ā I mean high risk of murder, bullying, and homelessness, and possibly being a criminal act depending on where you live]), your experience is going to be skewed towards finding other queer people. You think the group is predominantly queer people, but from the outside looking in, even as a queer person, Iāve mostly seen a bunch of straight women geeking over two middle aged white dudes possibly touching dicks, and usingĀ ārepresentationā as a mask. I havenāt mingled with your community ā Iāve got my own, who are and arenāt queer all the same.
And again, I say that with full knowledge that it is anecdotal evidence from my viewpoint and experience. I could be wrong. But that doesnāt mean youāre right either.Ā
Moving on. Most queer people (I donāt like the termĀ āqueersā personally, but as a queer person, you can reclaim that word however you want) you know stick together despite the differences. Okay. But if our difference is that you donāt think I deserve rights, or that my life is somehow worth less than a straight personās (voting Dump/Pence, specifically Mike Pence, who would rather a gay person go to a conversion camp ā where the risk of suicide is nearly 70% ā than be gay), then thatās not aĀ ādifference.ā Thatās almost a hate crime (and it actually is in some countries).Ā
I assume you and I have similar goals ā stop the carney-handed mango. I assume all but the 14% of LGBT people who did vote for that cheeto in a wig, do. Hence why I make a point of saying I donāt hate Rebs as a person (although the fact that xer Patreon is still up, and xeās still collecting money, despite the fact xeās publicly declared xe has no intention on ever making videos again, and even taking the existing ones down, is a little less than the perfect angel everyone is insisting that xe is).Ā
Tbh, maybe I tend to befriend more queer people irl, but you know what else is important? Straight allies. To me, being LGBT+ is a description of where I put my genitals/my gender identity, and I donāt exactly bond with people over that. A shared struggle, yes, and if I see a queer person being bullied, I will step in. I can support a gay manās rights, even if that gay man is going out there campaigning for the orangutan in a suit (and some did). Iāll say he should be allowed to get married to whoever he wants, and when his Nazi buddies turn on his ass, Iāll be helping him find a visa out of here, but dear Ahura Mazda, I wouldnāt be caught dead having a beer with him. In fact, they most criticism Iāve ever gotten for being trans, is from other trans people. Yes, they should have rights, but fuck them as individuals, holy shit, donāt tell me how to transition. You can be trans (or any LGBT+) and still be a shitty person.Ā
But like... about 10%-15% of people are queer. 10%-15% of people couldnāt have voted for our rights and won. Meaning we have a ton of straight people on our side. And thatās what we are: weāre people. I love Steven Universe and pizza. Iāll find people that love Steven Universe and pizza that didnāt vote for literally satan.Ā
Iāve personally never been wronged by a hateful tj//lcer. But as you pointed out, there was a lot of hatefulness that was slung around. I watched as people attacked Mark Gatiss for not making their ship canon, or call him straight (they really care about representation, donāt they? /s), attacked other queer ships, tags, bullied some other queer shippers into self-harm, etc.Ā
No, that wasnāt you doing any of that, and that wasnāt anything you participated in... This blog really isnāt about you, I donāt know why youāre so sad about it. This is about everyoneās actions that Iām starting to suspect we both found deplorable. Though I guess if you were a close follower of Rebs, you hated Mary from second one, which was really uncalled for (hate her for shooting Sherlock ā I donāt, but itās a reason ā but that didnāt happen until we knew her for two whole episodes, half of a third, and she was just a lovely person until that exact moment).Ā
The thing is, it IS just a show to me. Iām just responding to hate until I get bored with it. But tj//lc it became so much more to a bunch of people, and thatās why it got so toxic.Ā
Again, THE PROBLEM is tj//lcers were demandingĀ representation from a show, and writers, who were always honest that they werenāt going to give it.Ā At least not in the way they wanted (and when it wasnāt in the way they wanted, they had tantrums, which is why I say: it was never about ārepresentationā for some of them.). Rebs, even if it started as just a hobby, quickly became, and fed into this mass conspiracy that ultimately did end up hurting a lot of people. Possibly including xerself.Ā Thatās why I donāt feel bad taking your symbol: it is just a show, everyone had prior warning that jxhnlock wouldnāt happen, so the conspiracy was always just going to be fanfiction, and Rebs did some shitty things.Ā
The way people are freaking out... they need to get over it. Or if not, okay, soak in grief forever over a fictional ship, but thereās probably better ways of dealing with all this besides sending me hate. Because honestly, what does anyone hope to accomplish by sending me hate? Me to delete? Sure, letās say I did that. Jxhnlock isnāt going to be any more canon, and Rebs isnāt going to be any less wrong, and all of the hate xe encouraged is still going to be out there. Oh, and Iāll keep responding, which really just makes it worse.Ā
Had people just ignored me ā never sent any messages ā there would be precisely one post on this blog, which was my original announcement that I had it.
Also ā what have I said thatāsĀ āhateful?ā Yeah, okay, I called rebs aĀ ātwatā for being a misogynist, I thought it was delightfully ironic, having a misogynistic slur juxtaposed next to that observation (like saying, ādonāt fucking swearā), but no one got the joke, so I took it down. But otherwise? Saying John Watson is Straight is just a fact. Jxhnlock never happened, and since it didnāt, the insistence that heās bisexual has no standing. Heās always said, āIām not gay.ā I never took that to mean he was saying, āIām not gay, but I like men, Iām bisexual/pansexual.ā Jeez, no, if he was part of the community at all, I imagine heād let it pass, rather than get angry about the assumption (like Sherlock does, who is, said by the writers, to be neither gay nor straight. In fact, Iāve often heard that if youāre a good straight ally, it means not being upset if people assume youāre gay for standing up with them ā so in some interpretation, heās actually a bit homophobic). Iāve also pointed out that xe was wrong, which xe is.Ā My banner is of Gatiss confirm jxhnlock wasnāt happening again ā this is a thing that happened.Ā Are facts āhatefulā now?Ā
Also...Ā ālife is too short to hate.ā I mean... I think Iāve got enough life left in me to hate the sentient tire fire that uses too much fake tan cream, and the apparent resurgence of Nazis in America. Donāt you? Shouldnāt you?Ā
tj//cers are definitely not on that level, but I donāt hateĀ them, is the thing.Ā I said this before: I hate no one in particular, just what the legacy produced.Ā
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