When You Need To Bind Your Brochures
Brochures don’t only come in panels or folds. When your brochure has so many pages, I think it is best that you take the plunge and ask your printer on what kind of binding that suits your brochure printing.
The first thing you have to do is to plan (if you want with your printer) how you want the finished brochure printing product to look like when it’s put together.
Second, decide on the binding method that you’ll apply to your brochure printing task. There are several binding methods that your printer would be able to help you with. And with each of the method you’re going to use, it all depends on three factors: (1) the purpose of your brochure, (2) durability and appearance, and (3) cost.
Your bind depends on the purpose of your brochure. You may use a simple method for binding if your purpose is to just put all your pages together. Nothing fancy. Then you just have to ensure that your margins are wide enough to provide holes for either a ring binder or a spiral. If you feel that a saddle-stitch is what best suits you, then you need to consider that the inner pages can extend outside when folded.
Some bindings may be durable than the others. And still others may help you make your brochures lay flat when opened. For costs, you just have to decide whether it is more cost effective to do the binding yourself or have it included in your brochure printing job.
