You could try using screen shots. Or you could open the document in Photo and get the page you want then go to the export persona and export that spread and resize it to what you want.
You should also be able to Place your document inside itself (linked or embedded).
I’ve never done this myself with a real publication so I don’t know how well it works in practice, but a quick test (see attached image) allowed me to do it so it might be worth experimenting with.
I work with a placed .afpub as linked inside itself for quite a while and continue working in it, altering the linked spread included. – It works like a charm without any harm.
(Although I'd expect problems, similar to an endless mirror, e.g. if you take a video of a screen showing its recording simultaneously)
Just two things:
– The linked .afpub will not get updated unless you save. After save you get the update-info in the upper right corner.
– APub may ask twice to save the .afpub when you close it, because "the document has been modified" even if just saved. I guess because after the first save the placed version gets updated and therefore requires another save because of the .afpub being changed by the update. Quite conscious and normal this way.
Another approach is to export all pages as JPGs + place them linked as thumbnails. Advantages: placing a bunch of page-thumbnails is much easier/faster as single image files – than the 1 linked .afpub, which requires to select the displayed pages from the toolbar menu again and again for every single thumbnail. Disadvantage: you might need to export pages again to get a change on them become visible in the thumbnails. (whereas hardly every change is visible in small thumbnail size).
• In case you export as JPG (or PNG) again for layout updates just replace the previously exported images to get them updated as thumbnail resources automatically.
• Therefore export them initially with the .afpub's filename. (they become auto-numbers added before the suffix)
It might be an idea to upload the file.
.125 what unit of measurement is that? inches, cm...
Are the horizontal lines an image or pen drawn?
Publisher version