Not really. What you seem to be describing is the effect of the text box
margins. If you have text boundaries displayed, you'll see a dotted line
defining the text area inside the text. If you reduce the inner margins to
zero, the dotted line will be coincident with the outline. A text box is an
AutoShape and, as such, is really no different from a rectangle on which you
have used "Add Text."
In any event, there is an outline that will have to be removed if you want
text to float, unencumbered, over a graphic.
--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org
"Greg Maxey" wrote in message
...
I thought that a default textbox was actually a white borderless boxes
packed in a clear box defined using a 0.75 point outline ;-)
Suzanne S. Barnhill wrote:
And No Line as well, since text boxes by default have a 0.75-point
outline.
"Greg Maxey" wrote in message
...
On Nov 30, 9:01 pm, funkybunny
wrote:
I want to put a text over a photo on a word doc without the white
box. Is this possible?
If the "white box" you refer to is a textbox then all you need to do
is select and right click the textbox, choos "Format textbox", Colors
and LinesFillColorNo fill.