How Do You Bind Script Correctly For Plays?
Whether you’re binding your play for submission to theaters, producers and agents or you’re making copies for the cast and crew, binding your play correctly is essential. It takes minimal effort to bind a script correctly. As long as you have a three-hole punch and some fasteners, you’re in business and the copies of your play won’t fly away. Determine whether your script is actually ready and finalized for printing and binding. Have someone proofread it at least three times, format it correctly and make sure it won’t need any other major revisions. Print the number of copies you need plus three. If the total is greater than 20, you may want to increase the number of extras you have on hand. Take into account that people lose their scripts or ruin them in various ways. It will be a bigger inconvenience to have it reprinted later, so do it now. Collate the scripts so that they’re in order and ready for hole-punching. It’s a major task to sort out 25 copies of a 100-page document. To avo