Bleed is the amount of
artwork that falls outside of the printing bounding box,
or outside the crop marks and trim marks. You can include bleed
in your artwork as a margin of error—to ensure that the ink extends
all the way to the edge of the page after the page is trimmed or
to ensure that an image can be stripped into a keyline in a document.
The
Marks & Bleed area of the Save Adobe PDF dialog box lets you
specify the extent of the bleed and add a variety of printer’s
marks to the file.
- All Printer’s Marks
-
Enables all printer’s marks (Trim Marks, Registration Marks, Color
Bars, and Page Information) in the PDF file.
- Printer Mark Type
-
Lets you choose Roman printer’s marks, or Japanese marks for
pages printed in Asian languages.
- Trim Marks
-
Places a mark at each corner of the trim area to indicate
the PDF trim box boundaries.
- Trim Mark Weight
-
Determines the stroke weight of the trim marks.
- Registration Marks
-
Places marks outside the crop area for aligning the different separations
in a color document.
- Offset
-
Determines the distance of all printer’s marks from the edge
of the artboard. The trim marks are at the edge of the space determined
by the offset.
- Color Bars
-
Adds a small square of color for each spot or process color.
Spot colors converted to process colors are represented using process
colors. Your service provider uses these marks to adjust ink density
on the printing press.
- Page Information
-
Places page information outside the crop area of the page. Page
information includes the filename, page number, current date and
time, and color separation name.
- Bleed Top, Bottom, Left, Right
-
Controls the bleeds for the artwork. When the
button
is selected, these four values are proportional—editing one will update
the values in the other three.