If everything is chained the whole image flips. If you have other layers chained to the active layer they will flip. You select the flip tool, set horizontal and click on the canvas. It depends how you have everything set up. I have many layers, do I need flip each and every background layer individually Quote:I noticed the flip horizontally tool, that might be the solution I'm looking for,ĭoes it matter where and or how I place the B.cards as long as I flip them?ĭo I choose all and then flip like the whole a4 sheet? Quote:I'm not sure but I made it either 300 ppi or 600 ppi, not sure how to check that afterwards? Should be ok, I use 220 gsm in my Brother inkjet with a tight 180 deg paper feed. I have yet to find out if 240g will go through an Epson 元75 (10-03-2017, 12:19 PM)Wrenchman Wrote: No precut, I use A4 plain paper 75 g/m2 to test and for the final product a4 240g/m2, Also Inkscape for real-word dimensions and a card as a group of objects. Easier to create one design and clone to all the locations and it prints better. I checked the blank I use and the pre-cut sheets are symmetrical both horizontally and vertically. Not so much a bleed area required as a safe-area about 3 mm inside the card perimeter for text and logos. With the best will in the world, there will be a mismatch depending on how your printer takes up the paper. When it comes to printing, top is still the top. The back is just the front copied and flipped horizontally using the flip tool: ![]() ![]() One layer for the front and one for the back. What you could try is set the template on a transparent layers. Converting to metric can be a nuisance 300 ppi = 11.811 pix per mm ![]() You want to be printing at 300 ppi - There is an A4 standard template already in Gimp. Are you using pre-cut sheets (eventually after your trial prints ) If you are then there should be a template provided with dimensions.
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