Fred,


I consider the "golden age of audio" to be right around the 70's, give or take a few years. It was the age right after tubes yet before integrated circuits, where the sound was generally bigger and fatter than before or since. My opinion only.

beautifully written. so simple yet so meaningful. His voice is so soothing as well. I love that he's not forcing the song, but just laying it down, right down the line haha. I just had a thought, I think I'll dedicate this song to my hot wife. For sure I'll earn some brownies for dat shit ;)


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I've listened to this many times and I'm confused about one of the words in the line "When I wanted you to share/shape my life". Although "share" would be more common, it sounds more like "shape" and I've also seen this interpretation on some lyrics sites. Not that opinions are bad, but where can I get a definitive answer?

There is a blackline down the middle, between the two facing pages. In initially, I thought this was only a guide to let me see where the boundary between the pages is, but I see this even in Preview mode. The problem is that this line is, actually, a gap between the pages and is very serious for the following reason.

I print and bind the books myself and often have a full-spread image on the sheet of paper that will be the center sheet of a signature. When I print this sheet my carefully prepared image (in Photo) has a white line right down the center. That is, there is no ink there and that's why I think that there is a gap (perhaps only a pixel or two) between the facing pages. What is even more weird is the fact that, on print preview, I do not see the white line (perhaps just a resolution issues since the dpi on the image is greater than the dpi of my screen).

Is this a bug or have I done something wrong? In other words, how can a use facing pages without getting this line. (On pages where I have an inner margin, there is no problem - since there is no ink there anyway.)

Thanks for considering this. You are correct about the "line" and I was sloppy in my use of the word. I can't select it but the issue is that, when I print out a spread which has a single image that crosses the median line between the left hand and right hand pages, there is a while "line" down the middle of my image. It looks like a line simply because there is no ink there. That's why I also used the word "gap". It looks like Publisher has taken the left hand page and right hand p[age and stuck a thin "gap" between them. This gap has nothing in it and this is why it is not printed which them makes it look like there is a white line down my image.

The issue has not been solved. See the attached file. I put two images in the one file. The images are screen shots taken with Snip & Sketch. The image on the left shows a part of my whole image that straddles the spine. Notice the blue lines and the white line down the middle. The blue lines are showing the margins. The white line is exactly between the facing pages. So then I simply used Preview mode. As expected, the blue lines went away. See the right image. But the white line did not. While I could live with this on the monitor, I can't tolerate it if it actually prints out this white line. The tragedy is, that it does.

In my current specific case, some of my full spread images will not have anything printed on the other side. In these cases, I could create another file, not using facing pages but simply having one page twice as wide. In other cases, I have pages of the book printed on the other side. I can see a way to getting this done but it would be a great pain. The real solution is not to have this white line in the first place. I did a book (with the same size of facing pages and images that crossed the spine) a few years ago and did NOT have this problem. Of course that was with a much earlier version of the product.

The image is a single file (tiff file). It is in a frame and it covers the entire spread. It is not two images butted together.. I am using a single picture frame. It is on the actual pages, not in a master page. (I also use this only for a sheet that is in the center of a signature and hence the image is also printed as a single image. Being in the center of a signature, the white line is clearly visible in the final book. Had it not been in the center of a signature, the white line would have been hidden in the crease between different pages.)

While working on that page take a look at the Layers panel and turn turn things off and on to see if there is something that makes that line go away. I have been (and will be) caught out by having something left over from the early part of the design work still present.

The layers panel is pretty simple, having only two entries. The top one is the Picture Frame with its tiff file. The bottom one is a Master page but the white line is there even with the Master page turned off. Even with the Master page on, this page has a text frame (for a page number only) that does NOT straddle the gutter. This Master page also has a background jpg image but, as I said, the white line shows even with the Master page turned off. Now, just to make sure, I have just deleted the Master Page and so the layers panel now shows ONLY the Picture Frame with its tiff image. (To do another check (because I am so utterly confused and have struggled with this for ages) I opened the tiff file in Photo just to make sure that the white line was NOT in the tiff image. It is not.)

I also tried the following: File New, Facing Pages, start on left, 2 pages Create. Go into Photo from Publisher, create a black square on left page, Copy, Paste, Move one square over the gutter. White line appears. The layers Panel shows only two rectangles.

As to the line being white OR black, it is the "opposite" of the background color. That is, if on creation I have a white background, and create a black square of, say, half the height of the page, and place it over the gutter, then the center line (the one I don't like) starts from the top of the page as black but changes to white as it crosses the black square, then back to black at the bottom of the page. So it is not a normal line with some color.

One wild guess I have had is that, when sticking the left hand page next to the right hand page the counting got off (perhaps due to arithmetic rounding) by one pixel. Say each side is 100 pixels wide. Now I start to compose the image to be printed. I start counting from 0 (zero) as many computer scientists do. So I count of the 100 lines as 0,1,2, ..., 99. Then I go and get the right hand image. Where do I place it? This is where I make a mistake. I argue that the left hand image was 100 lines so now I must start the right hand one at 101! Makes sense? Oops! I have just skipped over line 100! So this "line" is NOT actually a line. It is a GAP. This is why it changes from black to white.

Another interesting thing is that while this line appears on the monitor, it does NOT appear if one exports the spread but DOES appear if you print. So it seems (to me at least) that there are two issues. The first is that the line should not be there in the first place. If one DOES want a guide to show the center of the spread, then it should be blue like the margin lines and vanish in Preview mode. The second problem appears to be related only to printing. This is where the 2-up and the compositing of the left hand image and right hand image comes into play. It is here that the "gap" appears.

The attached file shows the spread that is not printing out the way I would like. Actually, I'd prefer not to see the white line in Preview mode either but it is on the print that is the real problem.

Me myself, I like the delineation of pages with a line. I have to say that the ability to turn it off when in preview mode would be a great option to have in the preferences even if I would never use it.

The vertical line down the center is just the page boundary guide. For me, it shows as a light grey color, neither black nor white, & it does not change width when I zoom in or out, so I am reasonably confident that is all it is -- the non-printing page boundary guide.

But I also have an Epson XP-960. I have not been using that as it is in a different location etc., etc. However, I think the problem warrants me taking the time to try to print on that printer. It would be very interesting, and informative, if the same file printed fine on my Epson but had the line down the middle in the Canon.

There was, however, one huge advantage to doing it this way - I could easily print my signatures. (pages 1-16 as booklet, 17-32 as booklet etc.) This was something I couldn't do in Publisher. But there was a huge downside. I found that I could not control colour. But things may have changed and I thank you for the suggestion. It took me three years to get that first book out by which time our son and daughter-in-law were bringing our next grandchild into the world. So I can't do a book for one and not the other. It's this second book that I am struggling with now. I've been working on these issues for five years and, while I am still useless, I'm not quite as useless as I was in the beginning. 17dc91bb1f

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