![]() Don't sweat the layout and printing at this stage. Just author as usual, page number as usual. You may want to use a larger than usual font (you'll see why in a moment), say 14 or 16pt. That is, page by page, 8.5x11 portrait layout. If I understand correctly what you're doing, it's pretty straightforward.Ĭreate your document in Word as you normally would. ![]() Thank you for reading and any help you can give me! -JP If so, which of the apps I have (or another) would be best and easiest? What I'd like to do is be able to write each page in Portrait format, all on its own, and then when it comes time to print, I'd like the first two pages to print small, side by side on one side of a piece of paper, and the next two pages to print side by side on another side, etc, making the "little" half-letter-sized booklet, without me having to write the entire document like I have done up til now.Ģ. ![]() This works, but forces me to arrange the page numbers and sections very bizarrely and is a very unfriendly setup to look at or make edits to. Usually, I've used MS Word and 2 column layout and Landscape format to "cut" a normal piece of paper in half (virtually), with one page on the left side and one page on the right side, with 2 more pages on the back of that piece of paper. I have Adobe Acrobat Writer, MS Office 07 (including Publisher), Scribus and PagePlus Serif. I want to create, right now, just for my own personal purposes, 5.5" x 8.5" pamphlets or booklets, of standard US letter-sized 8.5" x 11" paper, folded in half - I expect each booklet to be composed of anywhere from 1 to 6 letter-sized pieces of paper, which should provide 4 to 24 smaller "page faces" to print text on.
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