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Published 2026-01-29 · 5 min read
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Paper guide

How to Print Paper Templates Without Scaling

Fix the most common printing issue: your template comes out the wrong size. Learn the exact settings for 100% scale, margins, and paper size.

PGPaperGens · writing about print·2026-01-29·5 min read
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Templates look “wrong” after printing when something in the pipeline silently rescales them: Letter content on A4 stock, a viewer preset at 97%, or a driver shrinking to the printable area. Your goal is simple—the printed line spacing should match the PDF math—so you can trust rulers, grids, and music staves.
This workflow is for anyone printing practice sheets, notebooks, grids, or forms at true size. You will set the document, tray, and dialog to the same paper name, lock scale to 100%, and prove the result with a one-page test before you print a stack.

Name the physical sheet you are printing to

Look at the pack in the tray: Letter, A4, A5, etc. Open the PDF’s document properties and confirm the page box matches that label. If they differ, fix the mismatch intentionally (change tray stock or regenerate the PDF) instead of letting the driver “help” with fit-to-page.

Lock the viewer and the printer to true size

In the print dialog, pick Actual size, 100%, or an explicit Scale: 100%. Avoid Fit, Shrink oversized pages, and similar options unless you mean to resize. Turn off any “optimize for small paper” or “auto-rotate and center” features while debugging—they often hide a second scaling layer.
Match orientation in both the file preview and the driver. Landscape music paper sent as portrait will look like a scaling bug even when scale reads 100%.
Print a single page and measure a known feature: a 1-inch grid interval, a stated line spacing, or a 50 mm bar if the template includes one. If the measurement is off, scaling is still active somewhere upstream.
Only after the proof matches should you duplicate the job for a class, studio, or binder pack. Save the working combination as a named preset in the driver or OS print dialog.

Common mistakes that look like “bad templates”

A4 PDF on Letter paper (or the reverse). The driver fits content to the sheet and spacing changes. Pick one standard per job.
Two scaling layers. Example: the viewer prints at 100% but the queue still applies “fit to printable area.” Reset both.
Ignoring non-printable margins. Content can clip even at true scale. Move critical marks inward or pick a printer margin preset that matches reality.

FAQ

Is “borderless” safe for line templates?

Borderless can change feed and clipping. For ruled homework or grids, stay with normal margins until you have proofed the same file twice.

What DPI should I export?

300 dpi is a solid default for line work; go higher only when hairlines must survive photocopying.

Appendix: unit reminders you actually use

Designers still jump between inches and millimeters. Keep 1 in = 25.4 mm handy when you compare a ruler to on-screen specs. For deeper tables and standards, use the dedicated guides linked below rather than duplicating them here.

Related resources

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