The Placement section controls how your source pages are positioned on the printed sheet. You can set output margins, scale content, choose its alignment, and control bleed behaviour. These settings apply to the pages currently selected in the page strip, and each box has a link control so you can share or override settings per page.
This is probably the part of Octavo you’ll spend most of your time in, as it is in Placement that you can position things perfectly to get them looking good.
In Placement, the document view has two modes:
You can make edits in either mode.
The Show bleed checkbox toggles showing the bleed area.
If you are confused by the difference between source margins, placement margins, printer margins, trim area, bleed area, and more: read Placement and Margins, which explains Octavo’s placement model.
A dropdown that lets you choose which media type (defined on the Media tab) to use for the selected pages. This determines which paper the pages will print on.
A visual margin editor for the space between the edge of the placement area and the edge of the trimmed output page. The four sides are labelled Top, Bottom, Inside, and Outside — inside and outside swap automatically depending on whether the page is a left or right page.
Choose how Octavo scales your source content to fit the output area:
The two “fit” options are identical if all your pages are the same size and have the same source margins. It’s only when the sizes are disperate that it makes a difference.
A slider and percentage field for setting the scale factor. Only visible when Mode is set to Manual.
A 3×3 grid that controls where content is placed within the placement area. The columns are Inner, Centre, and Outer; the rows are Top, Centre, and Bottom. Inner and outer correspond to the binding edge and the open edge of the page, respectively.
This only has an effect if your source is smaller than the placement area, as per the placement controls above.
Controls how source content is allowed to extend beyond the output margins. Choose from:
Bleed will only happen if the relevant source page has bleed enabled in the Source Page tab, as well as having content bleed enabled here.
In Octavo, you can use bleed in a few different ways — it’s not just for content that crosses the trim boundary. See Bleed for more.