[scribus] Using Scribus for a newsletter
Gregory Pittman
gpittman at iglou.com
Sat Sep 20 19:43:46 CEST 2008
Frank Swygert wrote:
> I think you're still having an issue with "master pages" and
> "templates". As Jan stated -- don't save each page, but one document
> with all the pages you need. My little magazine (more of a "fanzine"
> or fancy newsletter) is 24-26 pages.
> Don't create a template. Create your newsletter instead, then use the
> last issue as a template for the next. Or delete the text (except the
> ads and other elements that will remain the same) then save that as a
> template. This is what works best/easiest for me, but by all means
> find what works for you and do that! Forget about the terminology
> though and how you think things "should" be done. Once you start using
> Scribus you'll learn your way around and may change the way you do
> things as you learn -- nothing's set in type. ;>
>
> Ads don't change much, but they do on occasion. I always use the last
> issue as the next issue's template. Just remember to save the "last"
> as the "next" before making changes or you could overwrite the "last"
> one. When you do this it's easy to select and cut and ad, then paste
> it on another page, or move it about a page -- whatever is necessary.
> Don't get caught up in the terminology! I've never found a real use
> for "templates" as the above works much better. I have on rare
> occasion used a "ready made" template for some project, but for the
> most part I ignore that "feature". The only good thing about a
> template is that it can be locked so that items can't be changed. Once
> you open a template as a document, things can be changed, and then you
> save as a document, leaving the original template unchanged. This
> keeps you from overwriting your template, but that's all.
> Remember, a "master page" only has items that will be on every single
> page of the document. A "template" is a skeleton of the entire
> document, so you need to make it all first. Then open a new document
> using the template. The master page you created for the template is
> saved with the template.
Frank is spot on here, Joe.
You can easily totally forget about templates and Master Pages, and just
create your first newsletter. If later you want to create a template
from your newsletter, or create one or more Master Pages from your
newsletter, fine, but it seems you need to know much more about how to
use all the other elements of Scribus than worry about templates and
master pages.
Greg
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