![scribus link text frames scribus link text frames](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/JTo_NZeOPqA/maxresdefault.jpg)
To get an image, visit and search for Creative Commons images, or use your own. Once you have your text in your layout, it's time to start adding images. The point of Scribus is that it makes complex layouts easy to create. If you were only interested in text, you wouldn't be using Scribus. You'll know you have overflow by the red X in the lower right corner of your text frame. Alternately, you can right-click your text frame and select Sample Text for some place-holder Lorem Ipsum content, but for the sake of this exercise use enough sample text to provide an overflow. Import it as text (not as a comma delimited file).
![scribus link text frames scribus link text frames](https://i.stack.imgur.com/hB3AT.png)
If you don't have a big text file lying around, navigate up through your file system to /usr/docs/gcc-* and use the COPYING file. To import text, right-click on your text frame and select Get Text, or just hit ctrl i on your keyboard. Even for a small publication, the separation of the processes is smart let Scribus be a layout application, and let text editors be text editors. The historical rationale behind this is that the layout artist, in large publications, is rarely the author or copy editor. It's generally better to compose your content in a proper text editor like Emacs (or Libre Office, if you're less adventurous) and then import it into Scribus. To get text into your text frame, you could just start typing but Scribus isn't exactly meant to be a word processor. If you have used Inkscape or GIMP's text tools, this is exactly the same concept you are defining the boundaries for the flow of the text. Draw a text frame on the page where you want the text to appear. Access this with the T key on your keyboard, or by clicking the Insert Text Frame button along the top toolbar. Get text into Scribus with the Text Frame tool. Whether it's pages and pages of exposition or whether it's just a few blocks of bold statements, nailing down what textual matter is going to go into your design is the place to start. In most cases, the “content” is the text (or “copy” in publishing vernacular). Start with your content first, and then design. Similarly, with printed material, you should try to have all the actual content amassed first, and then do the fancy design work, because otherwise you are designing blindly and when more or less content comes to you at the end, you are forced to re-do the design to accommodate. For years on the web, designers tried to design sites by juggling both content and design all in one go, and they hated it so much that they reinvented their entire toolset with HTML5 and CSS3. It doesn't always work out this way, but the ideal workflow for page layout is to get your content in first.