Changing the Default Stroke to Inside or Outside (instead of centered)

When you want to change the default stroke, you need to remember these few essential InDesign lessons

Johnny wrote:

Often I draw a frame and then add a stroke to the box. InDesign always centers the stroke on the border! I know how to go to the stroke panel and align the stroke to the inside of the box, but, can I set the stroke to always align inside the box by default?

Excellent question! When a question includes the phrase “always… by default” the answer usually includes this phrase: “with no objects selected”! For example, if you want all the text frames you draw to always start off with the “bodytext” paragraph you made, first click the paragraph style while no objects are selected. That sets the default for this particular document.

(Or, if you create a paragraph style and click on it while no documents are open, then it becomes the default for all documents you create from now on.)

So in your case, you want to make sure no objects are selected, then click the desired alignment button in the Strokes panel.

Note, however, that this will only affect the unassigned frames — not text frames or graphic frames that you draw out. The unassigned frames are the shape frames you make with the Rectangle tool, Ellipse tool, and the Polygon tool. (In other words, this doesn’t work for the frames that have a big “X” in them.)

An even better way to change the default formatting of these objects is to change the definition of the [Basic Graphics Frame] in the Object Styles panel. Here’s where it gets funky, because this style is called “basic graphics frame” but it does not apply to graphic frames (the ones with an “X” in them). Instead, InDesign applies this style to unassigned frames! Very frustrating, because there is no way to make an object style that automatically applies to real graphic frames.

You can also edit the [Basic Text Frame] if you want to change the way text frames appear when you draw them. Fortunately, that works as you’d expect. Note, however, that I’m not keen on editing anything called “Basic” in InDesign. For more reading on this subject, check out:

Bookmark
Please login to bookmark Close

This article was last modified on December 21, 2021

Comments (5)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Loading comments...