The Bottoms of My Pages Don
The Bottoms of My Pages Don
The Bottoms of My Pages Don
don't print
Article contributed by Suzanne S. Barnhill and Dave Rado
Frequently people have problems with material at the bottom of a page (the page number,
for example, or the footer) not printing correctly. Often, the characters get cut in half so that
only the top half of the line prints. The most common complaint is that the bottom of a page
border doesn’t print.
The most common cause of this problem is that the bottom margin, footer margin, or page
border is outside the printable area of the page. All printers have an irreducible unprintable
area necessitated by the mechanical requirements of paper handling.
Your printer manual may specify the printer’s printable area, or this information may be
included somewhere in the Properties dialog for the printer driver. The simplest way to
determine the printable area for your selected printer, however, is as follows:
1. Go to the Page Setup dialog and choose the Margins tab.
Note: Access this dialog in any version of Word by double-clicking the ruler.
Alternatively, use File | Page Setup in Word 2003 and earlier; in Word 2007, on the
Page Layout tab, locate the Page Setup group and click the dialog launcher in the
bottom right corner. On the Mac, you have to choose Microsoft Word from the Settings
drop-down before you will see the Margins button.
2. Set Top, Bottom, Left, and Right margins to zero. Click OK. Word will present the
following dialog box:
3. Accept Word’s offer to fix the margins and note what margins it sets. You can then
Cancel out of the Page Setup dialog without actually changing the margins, but this will
let you know what restrictions you’re working under.
Usually the unprintable area will be largest on the trailing edge, that is, the bottom of portrait
pages or one side of landscape pages. Inkjet printers in general have a larger unprintable
area at the bottom of the page than laser printers (up to 0.67" is not uncommon; the record
is probably 1.01" in case of the HP 420). Even printers that can print “borderless” may be
able to do so only on certain sizes of paper (with a special carrier) and/or will require a
special setting in the printer Properties.