A bleeding edge is something which is too new and untested to be reliable or have any assurance of safety, or the figurative place where such things exist.
"Bleed" is when something runs off the edge of the page. A no-bleed ad has white space between the ad and the edge of the page.
Bleed means the item runs up to the edge of the page. It's called "bleed" because, on the press sheet, the item actually runs past the edge of the page and you trim off what you don't need.
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A bleeding edge is something which is too new and untested to be reliable or have any assurance of safety, or the figurative place where such things exist.
Bleed, in journalism, refers to an image or text extending beyond the edge of a page, allowing it to be trimmed without leaving a white border. It is commonly used in print media to create a full-bleed effect where the content runs right up to the page edge.
In journalism, "bleed" refers to when an image or graphic extends beyond the edge of the page, with the intention that it will be trimmed off during the printing process to create a clean, borderless appearance. Bleed is necessary to ensure that images or graphics printed on a page appear seamless and without any white edges.
pink, stippled, doesn't bleed easy when flossing, not rolled but rather a knife edge against the teeth
It seems that "blead" may be a typo or misspelling of "bleed." In design terminology, "bleed" refers to extending an image or color beyond the edge of a print document to ensure there are no white borders when it is trimmed.
The edge of a page is typically referred to as the "margin." Margins are the blank spaces surrounding the text on a page and serve to frame the content, improve readability, and provide space for notes or annotations. In specific contexts, the edge can also be called the "trim" or "bleed" if it extends beyond the intended cut line in printing.
Any print ad where either the image or background color is extended to edge of the page is a bleed. Meaning the image is "bleeding" off the page.
Bleed is the amount of space you add around your page size so that when it's trimmed nothing is cut off. For example if your page was A4 you would have margins set within this for the information to be printed and your "bleed" would be the extra area around the A4 page, usually 3-5mm depending on individual Printer. Bleed is especially important if you have an image that needs to run off the page. If you do not over hang this image into the bleed area, when it is trimmed it could leave a thin white line around the edges. hope this makes sense!
Print bleed refers to having an oversized print file (usually 1/8" each side). This extra area is trimmed off once print job is complete. This leave the final piece with a clean trimmed color edge. Without bleed, there is a chance when trimming the project that the final piece will have a white sliver where trimming may not be exact.