As Tony likes to refer to the insides of a book, he calls them “guts.” I quickly got used to that term because I was part of the team handling the book/cover. Once the portfolio book was edited for misspelled words, grammar, etc., we turned all the pages into a pdf. With how we set up the magazine, we had to approach this book similarly regarding placing pdfs diagonally opposite to one another. It was a process to figure out, but we had some help from Tony. I found out quickly that more pages equal more confusion. I will say that it helps to visually lay out the pages on paper before placing them in the new InDesign document for imposition. We also wrote out what the page consists of because it is easy to confuse the pages when there are numbers everywhere, believe me 😅. Once we figured out where each page belonged within the InDesign document, we were ready to print. We first tested it out on what we call “test paper.” We print it out on that paper, so we did not waste the good paper that may have been bought. I think it is a great idea to initially test it out.