"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
In Corel he uses "page 1" as the customer proof, then "page 2" is where he starts setting up the "print files"....so page to would be the one color left chest with info and crop marks page 3 would be the full back and page four would be an under base. Something like that and aperently when the previous artist would do this in Illustrator he would just create seperate files, I get there are many ways around this with layers but I think I need to present it to the owner as if it is just lake "pages" in Corel which is why I was wondering if there is a similar function.Nick
Quote from: Rocfrog on July 27, 2013, 06:40:19 PMIn Corel he uses "page 1" as the customer proof, then "page 2" is where he starts setting up the "print files"....so page to would be the one color left chest with info and crop marks page 3 would be the full back and page four would be an under base. Something like that and aperently when the previous artist would do this in Illustrator he would just create seperate files, I get there are many ways around this with layers but I think I need to present it to the owner as if it is just lake "pages" in Corel which is why I was wondering if there is a similar function.Nickcreate 3 artboards in the file. place customer stuff in artboard 1, design the front in 2 and back in 3. Then you can use the paages like in Corel to flip through them.pierre