You can also create a layout with a fold pattern. Fold patterns quickly create press-run sections with prenumbered page grids. The default or planned sheet and page size are automatically applied. If you use a fold pattern, you can adjust the trims to suit your needs.
Creep in a book can cause content to be trimmed due to pages pushing out when the sections are folded. You compensate for creep by progressively shingling the page image areas towards the binding to decrease the page gutter or margin width, without affecting content. If you must maintain the gutter and margin widths, you can choose to progressively scale the images instead of shifting them.
The amount of creep in a book is affected by the number of folds and by paper thickness, and the affected pages depends on the binding style. In a saddle-stitched book, the increased thickness at the fold can cause the inside section to push out. In perfect-bound books, creep is limited to the inner pages in each individual section.
When an imposition section is folded, its pages might bottle (also known as skew) due to the number of pages, the thickness of the paper, or the folding equipment. You might also need to set or disable shingling for specific pages in a book.
To compensate for bottling, you rotate the pages in the opposite direction. You specify either a positive or negative degree of bottling:
Specify the degrees and the point around which to rotate the pages.