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CGI presents:. Microsoft ® Office Word 2003 Training. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects. Course contents. Overview: Bringing your document to life Lesson 1: Adding a watermark or background picture Lesson 2: Adding a border, shading, or fill effect
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CGI presents: Microsoft® Office Word 2003 Training Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Course contents • Overview: Bringing your document to life • Lesson 1: Adding a watermark or background picture • Lesson 2: Adding a border, shading, or fill effect • Lesson 3: Creating special text effects Each lesson includes a list of suggested tasks and a set of test questions. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Overview: Bringing your document to life • Your document is complete, but something’s missing, and you don’t have a lot of time to hand-craft graphical pizzazz. Word has a large, built-in store of attractive backgrounds, borders, shading, and graphical text effects that you can apply quickly to the page or to text for instant effect. This course shows you how. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Course goals • Add a watermark or background. • Create borders and shading effects on text, tables, and entire pages. • Animate text and create other graphical text effects. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Lesson 1 Adding a watermark or background picture
Adding a watermark or background picture • Watermarks and backgrounds are somewhat similar—they can both be used to add visual interest in the document background without overpowering text. • However, their form and function veer off from there. • Watermark • Background Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Adding a watermark or background picture • The picture illustrates the most significant difference between the two types of images: • Watermarks are intended to appear in printed documents, behind the text. • Backgrounds are used in Web pages. • Watermark • Background Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add a watermark to a printed document • You can add two types of watermark to a document: a picture or text. • You insert both from the Printed Watermark dialog box (on the Format menu, Background submenu). The watermark is visible behind text but doesn’t obscure it. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add a watermark to a printed document • For pictures, you can choose from any image on your hard disk or from clip art in the Microsoft Clip Organizer. For text, you can select the text you want from the drop-down list or type your own text, and select font, size, and color the same way you do for regular document text. The watermark is visible behind text but doesn’t obscure it. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add a watermark to a printed document • Once it’s inserted, you can see your watermark in print layout view (click Print Layout on the View menu), or in the printed document. The watermark is visible behind text but doesn’t obscure it. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add a background to a Web page • Web page backgrounds can take a number of forms: • Solid color • Texture, such as different color marble or woodgrain effects • A pattern, such as stripes or checkerboards • A picture from your hard disk Decorative background on a Web page Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add a background to a Web page • To choose and add a background, use the Fill Effects dialog box (also on the Format menu, Background submenu). Decorative background on a Web page Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Suggestions for practice • Add a watermark. • Add a background. Online practice (requires Word 2003) Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 1, question 1 • What is the main purpose of a watermark? (Pick one answer.) • Authenticate your document as the original. • Add a dappled, water-like finish to your printed document. • Communicate useful information or add visual interest without overpowering the main text of the document. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 1, question 1: Answer • Communicate useful information or add visual interest without overpowering the main text of the document. You can add text watermarks such as “Confidential,” “Draft,” or any designator you choose. You can also add graphical watermarks. Both sit behind your text so that they don’t obscure it. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 1, question 2 • What is the main difference between backgrounds and watermarks? (Pick one answer.) • Backgrounds are always solid colors, and watermarks are always transparent images. • Backgrounds are intended for documents that will be viewed on the Web, and watermarks for printed documents or documents that will be displayed in print layout view. • There is no difference. The two serve the same function. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 1, question 2: Answer • Backgrounds are intended for documents that will be viewed on the Web, and watermarks for printed documents or documents that will be displayed in print layout view. Word helps you with this. For example, when you add a background fill effect, Word automatically switches to Web layout view if you’re not already there. And you cannot add a printed watermark if you’re in Web layout view; Word makes the Printed Watermark command unavailable. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Lesson 2 Adding a border, shading, or fill effect
Adding a border, shading, or fill effect • Borders, shading, and decorative fill effects aren’t just for holiday newsletters. Word offers a range of options for framing and emphasizing text, tables and table cells, graphics, and entire pages. • This lesson introduces these ready-made and customizable options and shows you the basics of how to add them to your document. Decorative page border and a graphic with a gradient fill Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Page borders • You can add full or partial borders to any portion of any page of a document. Word provides a variety of built-in page borders, from businesslike to fancy. • You start from the Page Border tab in the Borders and Shading dialog box (Format menu). Document with a graphical page border Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Page borders • From the Page Border tab, you can choose: • The type of overall border, from a simple box to shadowed to 3-D to a custom style of your design. • The line style, color, and thickness. • The artistic style, which can be fun if your document is informal or tied to a special occasion, event, or holiday. Document with a graphical page border Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Page borders You can preview the design right inside the dialog box, so it’s easy to see how your chosen effects will look. Document with a graphical page border Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Borders for text, tables, and graphics • You can put borders around discrete chunks of text to set them apart. You can also use borders to set off tables and graphics, as shown in the picture. • To add a border, you select the text, table, table cell, or graphic. Then open the Borders and Shading dialog box, click the Borders tab, and choose the style, width, color, and so on. Borders and shading applied to text, the page, tables, and graphics Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Borders for text, tables, and graphics • Note that if you’re working with AutoShapes (a particular type of Word graphic that you insert by using the AutoShapes command), the method for adding a border is different. After selecting the shape, you use the Line Color and Line Style buttons on the Drawing toolbar. Borders and shading applied to text, the page, tables, and graphics Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Shading • You can add shading to text, tables, or pages by using the Shading tab in the Borders and Shading dialog box. • As with borders, you can experiment with colors and styles, and preview the effects. Shading emphasizes the heading and pull quote. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Shading • Here, that preview is particularly helpful because the color and gradient you choose for the shading can make the words on the page hard to read. You always want to make sure that the effect you choose doesn’t overpower the text itself. Shading emphasizes the heading and pull quote. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Shading • As with borders, the shading for AutoShapes works differently than it does for text and tables. Select the shape, and then use the Fill Color button on the Drawing toolbar. Shading emphasizes the heading and pull quote. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Quick table effects • If you specifically want to set apart or spruce up a table, take a look at the Table AutoFormat feature. It provides built-in border, shading, and color schemes. • The schemes are great because the designs are unified and professional, and they save you the hassle of manually applying separate effects. Table with a Table AutoFormat scheme Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Quick table effects • To apply a Table AutoFormat scheme, first select the table you want. Then click through and make your choices in the Table AutoFormat dialog box (Table menu). The preview shows exactly what your choice will look like. If you feel creative, or if you find a style that you like but want to change a piece of it, you can modify it. Table with a Table AutoFormat scheme Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Quick table effects • You can also use Table AutoFormat as you’re creating a new table: In the Insert Table dialog box (Table menu, Insert command), click AutoFormat. Table with a Table AutoFormat scheme Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Graphic fill effects • You can color drawing objects—AutoShapes, text boxes, WordArt, and objects on the drawing canvas—with fill effects such as gradients. • If you have one of these types of objects in your document and want to add a fill, first select it. The AutoShape smiley face has a gradient fill. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Graphic fill effects • Then on the Drawing toolbar, click the arrow next to the Fill Color button to open the Fill Effects dialog box. Use the tabs to add patterns, gradients, textures, and other effects. The AutoShape smiley face has a gradient fill. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Suggestions for practice • Add a page border. • Shade a heading. • Format a table. • Add a gradient fill to a shape. Online practice (requires Word 2003) Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 2, question 1 • To add borders or shading to text or to a whole page, you start from which central place? (Pick one answer.) • The Borders and Shading dialog box. • The Font dialog box. • The Drawing toolbar. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 2, question 1: Answer • The Borders and Shading dialog box. To access this dialog box, which has separate tabs for each type of effect, you click Borders and Shading on the Format menu. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 2, question 2 • What’s the quickest way to add visual formatting to a table? (Pick one answer.) • Add borders to individual rows and columns, and then apply shading in the same sequence. • Apply a Table AutoFormat scheme. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Test 2, question 2: Answer • Apply a Table AutoFormat scheme. Word offers an array of built-in coordinated table schemes with borders, shading, colors, and other formatting that you can apply all at once instead of in separate steps. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Lesson 3 Creating special text effects
Creating special text effects • How do you emphasize text? Often it’s the old standbys, bold and italic, or maybe the occasional application of all caps. • But Word offers a range of graphical formatting gems—such as embossing, drop caps, WordArt, and animations—that can add strong visual impact when used sparingly. Drop cap, embossed text, WordArt, and text animation Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Special font effects • You can add a great deal of impact to text just by changing the font effect. • Start by opening the Font dialog box (Format menu). Under Effects, in the center section, you’ll see four effects. Shadow, outline, emboss, and engrave font effects Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Special font effects • Shadow darkens text and adds a slight shadow behind it. • Outline removes the solid fill of the text, leaving just an outline. • Emboss makes the text look like it’s raised off the page in relief. • Engrave makes the text appear pressed into the page. Shadow, outline, emboss, and engrave font effects Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Special font effects • Some usage tips • These effects often show up best when you use a larger font size. • In many cases, the effects look great when used in combination with other more basic effects, such as different fonts and font styles (for example, bold and italic). Shadow, outline, emboss, and engrave font effects Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Special font effects • Some usage tips • Like anything fancy, these effects tend to work best when used sparingly, for example when limited to headings or emphasis text. Shadow, outline, emboss, and engrave font effects Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Create a drop cap • Think of an ancient illuminated text, or the start of a fairy tale. That “O” in “Once upon a time.” In modern typography, that’s referred to as a drop cap. • It’s easy to create a drop cap in Word to convey elegance at the start of your document. The drop cap elegantly emphasizes the first letter on the page. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Create a drop cap • Select the letter you want to turn into a drop cap, and then click Drop Cap on the Format menu. The letter you selected appears in a text box, where you can select it and make changes if you want, just the way you would with regular text. The drop cap elegantly emphasizes the first letter on the page. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add WordArt • WordArt gives your words a graphic edge, turning any text into a shadowed, skewed, rotated, or stretched version of itself. • To add WordArt, you use the WordArt Gallery, which you get to from the Insert menu, Picture command, or by clicking the Insert WordArt button on the Drawing toolbar. WordArt provides quick effects such as shading and 3-D. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Add WordArt • Once you insert WordArt, you can use the WordArt toolbar to change it. The toolbar appears as soon as you insert and then select the WordArt, and lets you change things like the curve of the text, the background color, the space between letters, and so on. WordArt provides quick effects such as shading and 3-D. Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Animate text • If you’re working on a Web page or a Word document that will be viewed online, you can animate text. It’s a matter of adding a simple font effect. • Just select the text that you want to animate—for example, a heading—and then open the Font dialog box (Format menu). On the Text Effects tab, choose from the selection of animation effects. The Sparkle Text animation effect Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Animate text • As with any high-impact effect, it’s best to use text animation sparingly, limiting your application to individual words and short phrases. Otherwise, you risk diluting the impact, causing visual clutter, and in extreme cases, rendering text unreadable. The Sparkle Text animation effect Decorate documents with graphic and text effects
Suggestions for practice • Add a high-impact font effect. • Animate text. • Insert WordArt. Online practice (requires Word 2003) Decorate documents with graphic and text effects