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#1
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to
have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#2
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm
-- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#3
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to
change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.pagelayout
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on
creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#5
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
I did look through that document you have given the link for before I posted. I try to figure things out for myself first, but didn't find what I needed there. "Terry Farrell" wrote: See http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm -- Terry Farrell - MSWord MVP "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#6
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
Well, it's hard to give very specific instructions because you haven't told
us what version of Word you have. If it's 2003 or earlier, then when you click on the logo you'll get the floating Picture toolbar, which has a Text Wrapping button (dog icon) that opens a menu from which you can choose a different wrapping style. To insert a table, you can use the Insert Table button on the Standard toolbar or Table | Insert | Table. In Word 2007, when you click on the logo, the contextual Picture Tools | Format tab will be displayed, and there's a Text Wrapping button in the Arrange group. You can insert a table from the Insert tab. The letterhead article doesn't address relative placement of graphics and text because the way this is no different in headers and footers than it is in the document body, and this would be the subject of another article. But it does give other suggestions related to the creation of letterhead templates. FWIW, I am 65, and the closest thing I took to a computer course in school was Personal Typing. I'm entirely self-taught, and most of what I know I've learned here. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#7
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
Thanks! I did put that I had MS Office 2003 in my original post, but I didn't say Word 2003 specifically, I guess. I managed to keep fumbling around & accidentally found something about word wrap & changed it from True to False. Then I started playing with margins & such & eventually got it to do what I wanted. I wish I could say because it was I had suddenly become brilliant, but it was more accident than anything else. You have done what I try to (emphasis on the "try"). I always work on it myself for awhile, then I resort to reference books, then I look for someone who knows more than I do. It is a wonderful thing folks like you do- answering questions on message boards and maintaining FAQs to deal with some of us less-capable sorts out here in cyberspace. I, for one, really appreciate it! Blessings on you and all like you! Thanks a bunch..... Until the next time. -Kathleen Muskegon, MI "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Well, it's hard to give very specific instructions because you haven't told us what version of Word you have. If it's 2003 or earlier, then when you click on the logo you'll get the floating Picture toolbar, which has a Text Wrapping button (dog icon) that opens a menu from which you can choose a different wrapping style. To insert a table, you can use the Insert Table button on the Standard toolbar or Table | Insert | Table. In Word 2007, when you click on the logo, the contextual Picture Tools | Format tab will be displayed, and there's a Text Wrapping button in the Arrange group. You can insert a table from the Insert tab. The letterhead article doesn't address relative placement of graphics and text because the way this is no different in headers and footers than it is in the document body, and this would be the subject of another article. But it does give other suggestions related to the creation of letterhead templates. FWIW, I am 65, and the closest thing I took to a computer course in school was Personal Typing. I'm entirely self-taught, and most of what I know I've learned here. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#8
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
I think that Suzanne missed out a word that may help. She meant to say use a
two-column (borderless) TABLE. You then insert the graphic in the first cell and the text in the adjacent cell. Does that help you? Terry "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#9
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
Indeed. A little late, Terry, but I see now that that's true.
-- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Terry Farrell" wrote in message ... I think that Suzanne missed out a word that may help. She meant to say use a two-column (borderless) TABLE. You then insert the graphic in the first cell and the text in the adjacent cell. Does that help you? Terry "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#10
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
You're exactly right. I thought I had checked to see if you gave version
information, but obviously I didn't read far enough. Note that "word wrap" has nothing to do with text wrapping, which has to do with how text is wrapped around graphics. It ranges from not at all (the graphic is actually part of the text, inline) to Square and Tight, which are ways of wrapping text around the graphic, to In Front of Text and Behind Text, which allow text and images to overlap. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... Thanks! I did put that I had MS Office 2003 in my original post, but I didn't say Word 2003 specifically, I guess. I managed to keep fumbling around & accidentally found something about word wrap & changed it from True to False. Then I started playing with margins & such & eventually got it to do what I wanted. I wish I could say because it was I had suddenly become brilliant, but it was more accident than anything else. You have done what I try to (emphasis on the "try"). I always work on it myself for awhile, then I resort to reference books, then I look for someone who knows more than I do. It is a wonderful thing folks like you do- answering questions on message boards and maintaining FAQs to deal with some of us less-capable sorts out here in cyberspace. I, for one, really appreciate it! Blessings on you and all like you! Thanks a bunch..... Until the next time. -Kathleen Muskegon, MI "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Well, it's hard to give very specific instructions because you haven't told us what version of Word you have. If it's 2003 or earlier, then when you click on the logo you'll get the floating Picture toolbar, which has a Text Wrapping button (dog icon) that opens a menu from which you can choose a different wrapping style. To insert a table, you can use the Insert Table button on the Standard toolbar or Table | Insert | Table. In Word 2007, when you click on the logo, the contextual Picture Tools | Format tab will be displayed, and there's a Text Wrapping button in the Arrange group. You can insert a table from the Insert tab. The letterhead article doesn't address relative placement of graphics and text because the way this is no different in headers and footers than it is in the document body, and this would be the subject of another article. But it does give other suggestions related to the creation of letterhead templates. FWIW, I am 65, and the closest thing I took to a computer course in school was Personal Typing. I'm entirely self-taught, and most of what I know I've learned here. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
#11
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How do I put logo with address info next to it?
Yes that was very late! That happens if I switch my PC to standby before all
the messages have finished sync'ing. When I wake it up next time, the messages the complete but way later than originally intended. Terry "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote in message ... Indeed. A little late, Terry, but I see now that that's true. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "Terry Farrell" wrote in message ... I think that Suzanne missed out a word that may help. She meant to say use a two-column (borderless) TABLE. You then insert the graphic in the first cell and the text in the adjacent cell. Does that help you? Terry "KatCar57" wrote in message ... OK, I must just be stupid. I had read through your very nice info on creating letterheads before I posted & couldn't find anything related specifically to my problem. I can get the bear logo on the paper all day long. I just can't figure out how to get the other info next to him. The two-cell option sounds like a good notion, but I can't find where you do that. Neither can I find where you chose options on text-wrapping. We are talking I am a VERY new user. I keep trying to take a class, but it keeps getting canceled for lack of folks signed up. I am over 50, so computers weren't but a glimmer in the geek's eye when I was in school! Thanks for putting up with me! "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: There are several ways to approach this. The usually recommended way is to change the "text wrapping" on the logo from In Line With Text (the default, which treats the image as if it were a large font character) to Square, which will permit you to put text next to it. Unless you want to wrap the text very close to the image, however, you might find it just as satisfactory to create a two-cell (borderless) and put the logo in one cell and the text in the other. You can adjust the cell width as desired. Note, however, that with this approach you will have an empty paragraph below the table, but this will provide "breathing room" between the letterhead and your text. For more on creating letterheads, see http://sbarnhill.mvps.org/WordFAQs/Letterhead.htm as Terry suggested. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA http://word.mvps.org "KatCar57" wrote in message ... I am trying to create a letterhead for my husband's business. It needs to have our bear logo on the left & the address/phone/email info next to it (as in, all across the top of the page). Every time I get the bear where I want it, the address info won't go next to it. As you can tell, I am a complete newbie to this stuff. I have MS Office 2003. I have looked at a lot of the tutorials & some things in the knowledge base, but the seem to refer to letterhead where the logo is at the top & the address info is at the bottom. Any hep you way more knowledgeable folks could give a complete novice, would be greatly appreciated! |
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