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#1
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Custom label setup -- bug or user error?
Having an odd problem setting up a custom label in Word 2002. My labels are
3 inches tall, with 1 inch "wasted" space between each (vertically). So I set Vertical Pitch at 4", and Label Height at 3". But Word seems to be ignoring the Vertical Pitch, and it gives me a layout for 3" tall labels stacked immediately on top of each other, without accounting for the 1" vertical buffer between the labels. Am I doing something wrong? |
#2
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If you started with an existing label and modified it, those setting would
probably work. However, labels are really just tables with fixed cell dimensions, so what you really need is a table with alternate rows of 3" and 1". Or you can just use a table with 4" rows as long as you don't use more than the first 3" of each row. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "mc510" wrote in message ... Having an odd problem setting up a custom label in Word 2002. My labels are 3 inches tall, with 1 inch "wasted" space between each (vertically). So I set Vertical Pitch at 4", and Label Height at 3". But Word seems to be ignoring the Vertical Pitch, and it gives me a layout for 3" tall labels stacked immediately on top of each other, without accounting for the 1" vertical buffer between the labels. Am I doing something wrong? |
#3
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And you can confine yourself to the first 3" of each row by setting a 1"
bottom cell margin. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "Doug Robbins" wrote in message ... If you started with an existing label and modified it, those setting would probably work. However, labels are really just tables with fixed cell dimensions, so what you really need is a table with alternate rows of 3" and 1". Or you can just use a table with 4" rows as long as you don't use more than the first 3" of each row. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "mc510" wrote in message ... Having an odd problem setting up a custom label in Word 2002. My labels are 3 inches tall, with 1 inch "wasted" space between each (vertically). So I set Vertical Pitch at 4", and Label Height at 3". But Word seems to be ignoring the Vertical Pitch, and it gives me a layout for 3" tall labels stacked immediately on top of each other, without accounting for the 1" vertical buffer between the labels. Am I doing something wrong? |
#4
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Yeah, I could do a workaround by simply making 4 inch tall labels and trying
to not print in the wrong part ... but I'm puzzled as to why the Vertical Pitch setting doesn't seem to work. I mean, why does Word give you the opportunity to enter Pitch if it's just going to ignore it? Does it work for anyone else? |
#5
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Aside from setting up a table that has first a 3-inch row and then a 1-inch
row and another 3-inch row, and so on...I doubt you'll get much better feedback than you've gotten already (some pretty heavy-hitters answered your question). ******************* ~Anne Troy www.OfficeArticles.com "mc510" wrote in message ... Yeah, I could do a workaround by simply making 4 inch tall labels and trying to not print in the wrong part ... but I'm puzzled as to why the Vertical Pitch setting doesn't seem to work. I mean, why does Word give you the opportunity to enter Pitch if it's just going to ignore it? Does it work for anyone else? |
#6
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FWIW, I just tried this. It's obviously a very limited test, but I started
with Avery 5164 (Shipping), which has labels 3.33" high and 4" wide. This particular label has a horizontal pitch of 4.19", so it already has a "gutter" column in the middle, but the vertical pitch is 3.33", so there are no spacer rows. I created a new custom label based on this one and set the label size to 3" high and 3.5" wide. Word not only increased the center column but added 0.33" high spacer rows between the label rows. So apparently this does sometimes work. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "mc510" wrote in message ... Yeah, I could do a workaround by simply making 4 inch tall labels and trying to not print in the wrong part ... but I'm puzzled as to why the Vertical Pitch setting doesn't seem to work. I mean, why does Word give you the opportunity to enter Pitch if it's just going to ignore it? Does it work for anyone else? |
#7
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Not just sometimes. IF you start with an existing label and modify it, even
one that does not contain a dummy row, and the increase the vertical pitch to a figure greater that the height of the label, a dummy row will be inserted to produce a sheet of labels with that pitch spacing. -- Hope this helps. Please reply to the newsgroup unless you wish to avail yourself of my services on a paid consulting basis. Doug Robbins - Word MVP "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... FWIW, I just tried this. It's obviously a very limited test, but I started with Avery 5164 (Shipping), which has labels 3.33" high and 4" wide. This particular label has a horizontal pitch of 4.19", so it already has a "gutter" column in the middle, but the vertical pitch is 3.33", so there are no spacer rows. I created a new custom label based on this one and set the label size to 3" high and 3.5" wide. Word not only increased the center column but added 0.33" high spacer rows between the label rows. So apparently this does sometimes work. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA Word MVP FAQ site: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. "mc510" wrote in message ... Yeah, I could do a workaround by simply making 4 inch tall labels and trying to not print in the wrong part ... but I'm puzzled as to why the Vertical Pitch setting doesn't seem to work. I mean, why does Word give you the opportunity to enter Pitch if it's just going to ignore it? Does it work for anyone else? |
#8
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Doug & Suzanne, thanks much ... I'll try modifying an existing template
rather than creating a new one; sounds like that's the solution to my problem. |
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