So in the last video, we talked a bit about some different printing terms that you would need to know. Most of those, if you've used an online sites such as Canva or even Vistaprint, they have the different things that we talked about with crop marks and bleeds. Those are actually in the program themselves, and they will walk you through them and a lot of the programs you use, we'll walk you through them, but InDesign is a little bit different. So I wanted to show you right now, I've got this bar here that's supposed to, looks like it's bleeding off the edge. This right here is actually my margin mark. You can't change that. Right over here, it says margin. Right now, I've got it set to half an inch. You could put it to an inch that however, you're thinking you want your margins to be on your paper. But remember, we talked about things bleeding. It looks like this might go to the edge, but we're playing a guessing game if we think it might. What actually happens is they print it on bigger pieces of paper and then cut it. So in InDesign, it's a little bit different to have those show up. They don't automatically show up, especially once you've set up a document. So the best way to do those if you can do the same thing I'm about to show you, when you first set up your document, but I've already had mine set up. I'm about to sent it off, and it's like I forgot to put my bleeds in or sometimes, some people end up fixing it this way. But I go up here to File, and I'm going to go to Document setup. You'll notice, here's my margins again, my widths of my paper, all that stuff, but down here, we've got bleed and slug. Now, I didn't really talk much about slug. It is particular to InDesign. You don't use slugs too much anymore. What they used to be used for is when people were using a lot more commercial printers. You might give some little guidance or maybe you called the, it's like a little notes area is what it is, but we don't use it too much anymore. But there's my bleed up here, and notice it says when I specify the area for objects to extend beyond the trimmed page. Now, most commercial printers if you take something to them by a large, because remember those are the ones that you're going to want to do your larger runs on, they will fix it for you because they got a system they go by and all that stuff. But if you want to know where to put it in, again, it's under file documents setup. You notice this is locked, so over here, as soon as I put in 0.25, it is going to put it in all of them for me. What that's going to do, I'm going to say, "Okay, just watch my screen, it's going to add this little red line'', which is nice, they make it red for you because bleed. But if you'll notice, if I want to make double, triple, quadruple, sure that this is going to bleed all the way over, I need to actually come in here and do it myself. That is how you put together bleeds in InDesign program. Like I said earlier, most of your online stuff we'll have it built in or they'll walk you through it, but in design, it's a little bit different. So maybe that'll help you if you wanted to put in the different and these. They'll go in and know that these are the crop marks. They don't show up on here, but they will for the commercial printer will go in and put that depending on their little steps and tools and things that they use. That's how to put a bleed in an InDesign.