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Here is a link of sample pages. I was looking for them and I thought others might.

 

http://livelylatin.com/BB1Samplebook/Lesson2/index.html

 

 

The pages have a nice layout. I have a black and white printer and I think it would be fine other than the picture study for which I would bring the image up on a computer.

 

Are there any other things that would make printing the book in b&w not a good choice?

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Here is a link of sample pages. I was looking for them and I thought others might.

 

http://livelylatin.com/BB1Samplebook/Lesson2/index.html

 

 

The pages have a nice layout. I have a black and white printer and I think it would be fine other than the picture study for which I would bring the image up on a computer.

 

Are there any other things that would make printing the book in b&w not a good choice?

 

I think in the FAQ it mentions you can print most of the book in B&W, that there are only a few pages you might want to do in color. That said, I haven't used it yet.

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  • 1 year later...

Well, I'm obviously late to the party, here, but here's my two cents for anyone still following this thread...

 

If you're using her suggested filing system for the completed work, you may want to keep a red, blue, and brown (or green, since it would be easier to find) pen handy to put a colored dot on each paging indicate what color the border would have been (this was meant as an aid to filing them). I personally don't have any trouble deciding which section something should go in based on the content, but I've also studied Latin before and her sections make perfect sense to me. In either case, referring back to the original on the PDF will tell you what color the border was, so don't feel like that's a reason to print in color.

 

Other than the artwork, I don't see any reason to print any of it in color unless you want to. Even the art pages I would probably feel justified in printing in greyscale, then finding larger versions in color (as I do for all curricula that use these works, even if they're in color already). Sometimes this means printing them separately, sometimes it means finding it in a large-format book of artwork, or sometimes it means looking at it on the screen. On rare occasions we actually get to see the piece in person if it happens to be in a nearby museum. The bigger the better, within reason of course.

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