answer:To solve the problem of bleeding, here’s an old trick I learned from my art director when I was editing an association newsletter: place a sheet of black paper (such as construction paper) behind the page you want to photograph. It cancels the bleed-through. I would also strongly suggest looking carefully at the words on any page you choose because even if they are “not important,” they could convey unintended significance to the viewer of the piece. Suppose, for example, you chose the page with “break” on it, versus the page with “symmetry.” Or the page with “awesome” or “hope” versus the page with “vengeance.” I don’t think you can incorporate words into a work of art and not have them mean anything. One of the questions I was taught to ask about a piece of art was, “Are there any words in it? What are they, and what do they signify?”