Thank you for sharing. It took you less than 3.5 minutes to share how to set up a grid. Something most channels take 11- 20 minutes to break down. Thank you! Thank you!!
Hi! Thank you for this tutorial! I would have loved it with more details about your calculations. What made you choose 4 lines? And why 11pt leading? Thank you!
This is good, thank you, but it needs more explanation on the calculation (beyond the calculation:). e.g. x 4 lines -- baseline -- ?? Also, how do you adjust if you have a non-conventional page size, e.g. 5 x 6.5 or 5.25 x 6.75? because the initial division ends up as 1.2857 -- rounded up is the same as for your page size, yet the calculations don't work out for lines outside margin...the page size is much smaller than the lines in the margin and a negative sum results.
Hi ..I need help... in indesign, I made some layout grids and columns and margins and I could see them all this while but suddenly it disappeared from all the pages and I cannot see them anymore even though the grids are there ...why is this happening I tried everything...what's the issue ? Can anyone help?
Hi, in determining the number of Rows and Columns, did you come up with ideal nos. beforehand (13 rows / 10 col, gutters and lines) or is it a result of the apect ratio?
@@MindIslandDesign Thanks. When you said "I would like 13 rows and 10 columns..." did you pretermine that or did you mean you were able to make 13 rows/10 cols by dividing the aspect ratio?
@@taraq1361 Your aspect ratio will always be 1 (the width) to the result of height divided by width. The number of columns and rows respectively are just those numbers multiplied by 10, so you'll always have 10 columns because 1 * 10 = 10. So an aspect ratio of 1:1.3 gives you 10 columns and 13 rows, an aspect ratio of 1:1.6 gives you 10 columns and 16 rows, and so on.
I am baffled by this. Why such an important thing is so difficult to achieve. For me, no alignment equals rubbish publication. Why the developers make it so hard to achieve is beyond me. Great video by the way. Thank you.
Learn how you can create multiple types of grids in this Illustrator tutorial! 👉 th-cam.com/video/G7LWSXimCkQ/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for sharing. It took you less than 3.5 minutes to share how to set up a grid. Something most channels take 11- 20 minutes to break down. Thank you! Thank you!!
Glad you liked the video!
Hi! Thank you for this tutorial! I would have loved it with more details about your calculations. What made you choose 4 lines? And why 11pt leading? Thank you!
This is good, thank you, but it needs more explanation on the calculation (beyond the calculation:). e.g. x 4 lines -- baseline -- ?? Also, how do you adjust if you have a non-conventional page size, e.g. 5 x 6.5 or 5.25 x 6.75? because the initial division ends up as 1.2857 -- rounded up is the same as for your page size, yet the calculations don't work out for lines outside margin...the page size is much smaller than the lines in the margin and a negative sum results.
How did you know each row would have 4 lines?
Thanks but for some reason I can't use 'pt' in the gutter size field. It just reverts back to 'in'
great!!! thx
Hi ..I need help... in indesign, I made some layout grids and columns and margins and I could see them all this while but suddenly it disappeared from all the pages and I cannot see them anymore even though the grids are there ...why is this happening I tried everything...what's the issue ? Can anyone help?
Hi, in determining the number of Rows and Columns, did you come up with ideal nos. beforehand (13 rows / 10 col, gutters and lines) or is it a result of the apect ratio?
In this case, it is a result of the aspect ratio of my document
@@MindIslandDesign Thanks. When you said "I would like 13 rows and 10 columns..." did you pretermine that or did you mean you were able to make 13 rows/10 cols by dividing the aspect ratio?
@@rv_PH I'm wondering how he came to that number as well
@@taraq1361 Your aspect ratio will always be 1 (the width) to the result of height divided by width. The number of columns and rows respectively are just those numbers multiplied by 10, so you'll always have 10 columns because 1 * 10 = 10. So an aspect ratio of 1:1.3 gives you 10 columns and 13 rows, an aspect ratio of 1:1.6 gives you 10 columns and 16 rows, and so on.
@@samcooke343 What if you have an aspectratio of 1:1.634?
I am baffled by this. Why such an important thing is so difficult to achieve. For me, no alignment equals rubbish publication. Why the developers make it so hard to achieve is beyond me.
Great video by the way. Thank you.
You could have made this a lot more simple to follow. Everyone with different sizes and metrics isn't going to understand.
Mate, could you do this but with A4 format?
Honestly I did not understand . please 🙏 break it down
𝔭𝔯𝔬𝔪𝔬𝔰𝔪 🤪
🧐
haha this was genius!!