Understanding Bleed in Printing

Learn why bleed is essential for professional printing results

What is Bleed?

Bleed is the area of your design that extends beyond the final trim size. It ensures that when your printed piece is cut to its final size, there are no white edges or gaps where the design should extend to the edge.

Full Page View

Interactive Bleed Visualization

Hover over each area to learn about its purpose and requirements

Bleed Area
Trim Line
Safe Area
Your Design
8.5" × 11"
👆

Hover over the areas above to learn about bleed requirements

Bleed (0.125")
Trim Line
Safe Area

Corner Detail

Corner Detail View

Hover over areas to see where the scissors cut and how bleed works

Bleed Area
Trim Line
Safe Area
Corner
✂️

Hover over the corner to see the cutting process

0.125"
Bleed
0.25"
Safe Area

✅ With Proper Bleed

  • • Clean, professional edges
  • • No white gaps or borders
  • • Design extends to the edge
  • • Perfect for business cards, flyers, booklets

❌ Without Bleed

  • • White edges and gaps
  • • Unprofessional appearance
  • • Design doesn't reach the edge
  • • Requires reprinting and delays

Our Bleed Requirements

0.125"
Standard Bleed
Required on all sides for most products
300 DPI
Resolution
Minimum resolution for print quality
PDF
File Format
Preferred format for best results

How to Add Bleed to Your Design

Adobe Illustrator

  1. Go to File → Document Setup
  2. Click Edit Artboards
  3. Add 0.125" to each dimension (width and height)
  4. Extend your background and design elements to the new edges
  5. Export as PDF with "Use Document Bleed Settings" checked

Adobe Photoshop

  1. Go to Image → Canvas Size
  2. Add 0.25" to width and height (0.125" on each side)
  3. Extend your background layer to fill the new canvas
  4. Export as PDF with "Include Vector Data" checked

Canva

  1. Create your design at the final size
  2. Go to File → Download
  3. Select PDF Print format
  4. Check "Include crop marks and bleed"
  5. Download and submit your file

Common Bleed Mistakes to Avoid

Placing important text too close to the edge

Keep text at least 0.25" from the trim line to avoid it being cut off

Not extending background colors to the bleed area

Always extend your background to cover the entire bleed area

Using low-resolution images

Ensure all images are at least 300 DPI for print quality

Ready to Print with Perfect Bleed?

Now that you understand bleed, create professional-looking prints every time!