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spread
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What does 'She expected a spread soon in House & Gardens.'?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.To add to Quizzy's answer, I'm not disagreeing! [please correct me if I'm wrong QM,] but I think the term started with the newspaper industry? The middle page [which could be laid flat - no folds] could have photos/words printed right across the middle 'margin' [known as the gutter] and was called a centre page spread or splash
I'm not disagreeing with you either, Paul, certainly re the origin possibly lying with newspapers. The OED definition - which I've now looked up - refers to both papers and periodicals/magazines.
I'm not sure, though, about its referring specifically to the centre pages, even in the early days. In fact, one of the illustrative quotes in the OED mentions "a four-page spread", which presumably wouldn't work according to your description.
There has, though - as you say - since the 1940s at least, been something specifically referred to as a "centre spread". 'Spread' itself has meant an extended article since almost a century earlier than that. All-in-all, in modern usage, it doesn't seem to matter much whereabouts in the publication it appears. Cheers