Wizard | Imposition

If you’ve ever printed a booklet at home, you know the pain. Page 1 is supposed to be on the front cover, but when you staple it, page 40 ends up next to page 2, and everything is upside down. You curse. You waste paper. You give up and just buy the book.

It transforms chaos (1,2,3,4…) into order (4,1,2,3… folded). It saves trees by maximizing sheet usage. And it spares modern designers from the 19th-century torture of doing imposition by hand with a light table and a calculator. imposition wizard

But the "Wizard" part is key. A wizard guides you step-by-step through a process that, in the old days, required a decade of apprenticeship and a photographic memory for "printer's spreads." To appreciate the wizard, you have to understand the headache it prevents. If you’ve ever printed a booklet at home,

It just did a dozen complex math problems so you wouldn't have to. You waste paper

Soon, AI wizards will analyze your final trim size, paper stock, and binding method automatically by scanning the file’s metadata. They’ll even detect which pages are color vs. black-and-white and suggest the most economical sheet layout. The Imposition Wizard is not glamorous. It doesn't generate art or write poetry. But every time you open a magazine, flip through a perfect-bound catalog, or enjoy a stapled zine, you are holding the wizard’s handiwork.

It’s like a choreographer for paper.