And I’ll also assume you know how to create chord diagrams and you and can start with a page that looks like this: I’ll assume you can create a score with one stave that has acoustic guitar as the assigned instrument. House style > Edit instruments > Instruments > Acoustic guitar > Edit instrument > Edit staff type > staff design: number of staff lines ‘0’ > Other Objects: uncheck Bracket, Initial clef & Key signatures / Tuning > Barlines: uncheck Initial barline & Barlines> Notes and Rests> Note Properties: uncheck Bar rests>okay and close back to score>click on meter (4/4) in bar 1 and delete The signal flow that shows you the solution to this project is: Essentially he needs an ‘invisible staff’ that provides a framework to layout the page. What Pete needs for this project is to create an instrument or edit an instrument that has no staff lines, no bar lines, no key signature, no clef. Pete wanted to take advantage of the chord diagrams in Sibelius and the spacing and layout that attaching the chord diagrams to a staff would provide but just end up with a page of chord diagrams and text. He recently asked me how he could produce a page of chord diagrams in Sibelius but not show the staves. Pete uses Sibelius for his guitar arrangements and method books. My friend Pete Huttlinger is a fabulous guitar player and author of many excellent guitar books and videos. Using the concepts I’ve presented in the “Signal Flow and Music Notatation Software” blog posts, let’s look at an example of how to apply this to a real world notation situation.
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