Prest0
First Post
Okay, I could ask this question on a design forum, but I thought I'd try my fellow e-publishers first.
I'm using InDesign CS, and I'm unable to balance the columns. My "keeps" rules in my styles dictate that the first two and last lines in a paragraph be kept together to prevent widows and orphans. Consequently, some columns come up short because it'll break the column at the end of a para rather than allow only one sentence of the paragraph to hang.
I'm aware that InDesign allows you justify columns, and normally this would fix the problem. However, that option is greyed out if the text box flows around something with text wrap. I make a point to have some sort of visual element on every page--be it a sidebar, illustration, or cutline--so that doesn't help me at all. In other words, I'm stuck.
How do you go about insuring your columns are neatly balanced?
I'm using InDesign CS, and I'm unable to balance the columns. My "keeps" rules in my styles dictate that the first two and last lines in a paragraph be kept together to prevent widows and orphans. Consequently, some columns come up short because it'll break the column at the end of a para rather than allow only one sentence of the paragraph to hang.
I'm aware that InDesign allows you justify columns, and normally this would fix the problem. However, that option is greyed out if the text box flows around something with text wrap. I make a point to have some sort of visual element on every page--be it a sidebar, illustration, or cutline--so that doesn't help me at all. In other words, I'm stuck.
How do you go about insuring your columns are neatly balanced?