Scribus Indesign



One of the more well-known InDesign alternatives is Scribus. Scribus is a full-featured desktop-publishing application capable of rendering professional-quality publications. It supports most major bitmap formats, including those composed in Adobe Photoshop. It does have a fairly steep learning curve, although an official manual is provided. Meanwhile, Scribus facilitates file import from Adobe InDesign, MS Word, Open Office, Publisher, etc. Moreover, Scribus integrates with Windows Full Python Interpreter. With the several inputs and output file formats supported, Scribus will work with even more platforms.

If you are self-publishing, one of your tasks is to design the interior of your book. You can use your word processor, but that often leads to a shoddy job (see Book Interior Design: Tips to Avoid the Amateur Look). Scribus is an open-source desktop publishing program that you can use for your book interior design. In this post, I’m going to provide some Scribus files that you can use as templates to develop your book interior design. Instructions included.

Scribus indesign importieren

Scribus

You will, of course, need Scribus, which is available for a number of platforms. As a believer in open-source software, I’m using Linux (Ubuntu, to be exact). If you are new to Scribus, be warned: Scribus has a moderately steep learning curve. (Not as steep, however, as Adobe InDesign.) This is why you want to start with a template to work with as you learn the ins and outs of the program.

Indesign

The Templates

I’ve made three templates: one for the front matter of your book, one for the book chapters, and one which is the front matter and beginning of the soon-to-be-best-selling novel “Lollipop” by Volomire Nobakeoff. The templates are for a 9 in x 6 in page size book and are available in the Downloads section below. As examples, I made Lollipop.pdf from Lollipop.sla and Mody_Dick.pdf from the basic novel templates. I provide everything you need to make the files except the fonts.

The Fonts

The templates use only two fonts; download them here: EB Garamond and Sorts Mill Goudy. Instead of these fonts, you can use any fonts on your system. In order to use different fonts, you will have to edit the Scribus styles.

Work Flow

Scribus slows down with large files. I once tried to work with a 68,000 word novel and it was unusable. The best way to use Scribus is to make your front matter and individual chapters as single files then put them together later with a separate program. I used pdftk in Linux but there are programs for Windows and the Mac that will do the same thing. Below, I provide a file called How_to_Use_the_Templates.pdf which describes the making of Moby_Dick.pdf from the basic novel templates.

An advantage to this method is it is easy to find a mistake that you know is in, for instance, chapter 3 and fix it. Another is that if you make a horrible mistake and completely mess up, you have only destroyed one chapter an not the whole book.

One of the drawbacks to this method is that changing anything in your book that affects the whole book, such as margins, fonts, location of headers, or page size requires you edit all the files. So carefully consider the look and feel of your book before you start final production. I make a bunch of separate front matter and chapter files and print them out to see how they look. When I’ve got the look I want, I start making the final book.

Scribus Indesign Import

Downloads

basic_novel.zip – (896 kB) – This zip file unzips to a folder containing everything below. (896.5 kB)

Lollipop.sla – (86.8 kB) – The Scribus file for the beginning of “Lollipop” by Volomire Nobakeoff.

Scribus Indesign Software

Lollipop.pdf – (238.4 kB) – The PDF file from Lollipop.sla.

basic_novel_front_matter_template.sla – (60.2 kB) – The Scribus file for the front matter of your book. This is a text file. It may open directly in your browser. Just “Save Page as” – it will have the extension .sla and it will work fine.

basic_novel_chapter_template.sla – (78.2 kB) – The Scribus file for the book chapters. Opens as a text file. “Save Page as”.

basic_novel_template_information.txt – (1.3 kB) – This file contains information about page size, margins, fonts, styles, and more. A big help if you are trying to learn Scribus.

How_To_Use_the_Templates.pdf – (43.4 kB) – The instructions for how to use the basic novel templates. Required reading. I use the example of making Moby_Dick.pdf from the basic novel templates and the Moby Dick text.

Moby_Dick.txt – (52.4 kB) – The text of the first three chapters of Moby Dick by Herman Melville.

Mody_Dick.pdf – (758.8 kB) – The PDF file resulting from the How_To_Use_the_Templates.pdf instructions.

Update

This posted was updated on 5/23/16. The first paragraph of chapter 1 in “Lollipop” and the first paragraph in chapter 3 of “Moby Dick” were formatted as “paragraph indent”. This is, of course, wrong: the first paragraph of the chapter should be “paragraph no indent”. This has been corrected in all files.

A third font, Alegreya, slipped into the templates as the page number font. This has been changed to EB Garamond. Also one of the page numbers was formatted as italic. This has been changed to normal.