One way to go green and do your bit for the rainforests is to save printing paper. This told you how to delete things from website pages before printing. You can also print more than one page onto the same paper.
So instead of printing two pages onto two A4 sheets, you can print a couple of pages on one bit of paper. This is how you can do that with MS Word and the iPrint software. Also see our article First, open a document to print in MS Word. Then press File Print to open the printing options shown below.
Multiple Pages Per Sheet. Load the document you want to print. Choose the Print option from the File menu. Use the Pages Per Sheet drop-down list (lower-right corner) to specify how many pages should be combined on each printed page. Specify any other printing options, as desired. Click on OK to print your document. Dec 06, 2018 In Word for Windows I used a page layout option '2 pages per sheet.' This was not the printer option to print multiple pages on a sheet but a layout option in Word. I have now switched to a Mac and am using Office 365. I cannot find that option.
Alternatively, press the software’s Ctrl + P hotkey. Note that the snapshot below is from MS Word Starter 2010, which might not have exactly the same UI layout as other versions. Nevertheless, the printing options should still be much the same. Press the 1 Page Per Sheet button to open the drop-down menu shown in the snapshot directly below. That includes options that enable you to print up to 16 pages on a single sheet. Select an option from there, and then click Print to print the pages out.
If you need to print multiple pages onto a single sheet of paper with alternative software, check out iPrinter. This program enables you to print multiple pages on each sheet of paper with numerous software packages. Press the Download Now button on to save its setup file. Open the setup wizard to install it.
![Word Word](http://main.makeuseoflimited.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/iprint01.jpg)
Open a document or website page to print. For example, print a website page out in Google Chrome. Click the Customize Google Chrome button and Print to open the browser’s printing options. Select Change to open the window below.
Then you should select the iPrint destination. Now press the Print button. That will open the iPrint window shown in the shot below. There you can select Multi-Page: 2 Pages or Multi-Page: 4 Pages printing options to print two or four pages onto a single sheet. Select a printer from the drop-down menu and press the Print button to print the pages.
You can also delete pages from the printing by selecting them with cursor and then clicking the Delete the Selected Page(s) option. The deleted page is then highlighted red as below. The deleted pages will save some ink. So now you can print multiple pages out on less paper with MS Word and other software packages.
This will save you at least half the amount of paper, and if you’re printing website pages more savings can be made with some extra browser extensions. To further save paper, select lower font values in your text documents.
Do you have Acrobat or Reader? In Acrobat you can create e.g.
8 copies of your voucher that you want to print and then select to print 8 PDF pages on one paper sheet. Acrobat (or Reader) are not doing this automatically, all you can select on the print dialog is to have n pages from your PDF file on one sheet.
To copy a page, open up the Page Thumbnals pane on the left side. Hold down the Ctrl key and select a page, and while clicking on the page, drag it to the location where you want to have the copy of the page. You can select multiple pages and copy all of them (e,g, if you need 16 vouchers, start out with one, select one and copy, then select the two vouchers and copy, then select the now four. makes 16 in no time).
Here is a link to the instructiosn that describe how to copy pages: Then, once you are done and have the correct number of pages, select to print and select to print 'Multple' pages, select how many in how many rows/coluns, and you should be done. Karl Heinz Kremer PDF Acrobatics Without a Net PDF Software Development, Training and More.