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Hi -
Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#2
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See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm
-- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#3
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Hi Suzanne,
Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#4
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Perhaps you'd have better luck exporting the graphic and inserting it as a
picture. See http://www.gmayor.com/extract_images_from_word.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi Suzanne, Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#5
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Hi suzanne,
Thank you so much for that very helpful article! By following the instructions, I was able to extract the drawing and save it as an image. The text boxes and lines stayed in placed, as drawn and formatted. As the article stated, the resolution was not the same, and after testing various options for the target monitor, I wasn't able to get the image as clear as I liked. The text in the boxes appear bolder than the original, and some of the text seemed to run together, and couldn't be read. But, this was such a great article, and knowing that Word does have the capability to extract images will be very useful for future projects. Thanks so much for answering my post, and for offering additional suggestions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Perhaps you'd have better luck exporting the graphic and inserting it as a picture. See http://www.gmayor.com/extract_images_from_word.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi Suzanne, Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#6
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Given the results you cite, you probably would get similarly disappointing
results if you tried using Copy and then Paste Special as (experiment with different picture types). But it might be worth a shot. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi suzanne, Thank you so much for that very helpful article! By following the instructions, I was able to extract the drawing and save it as an image. The text boxes and lines stayed in placed, as drawn and formatted. As the article stated, the resolution was not the same, and after testing various options for the target monitor, I wasn't able to get the image as clear as I liked. The text in the boxes appear bolder than the original, and some of the text seemed to run together, and couldn't be read. But, this was such a great article, and knowing that Word does have the capability to extract images will be very useful for future projects. Thanks so much for answering my post, and for offering additional suggestions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Perhaps you'd have better luck exporting the graphic and inserting it as a picture. See http://www.gmayor.com/extract_images_from_word.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi Suzanne, Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#7
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Thanks for the additional suggestion, Suzanne. It's because of knowledgeable,
extremely helpful people like you that I keep returning to these discussion groups. Have a wonderful weekend! ![]() "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Given the results you cite, you probably would get similarly disappointing results if you tried using Copy and then Paste Special as (experiment with different picture types). But it might be worth a shot. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi suzanne, Thank you so much for that very helpful article! By following the instructions, I was able to extract the drawing and save it as an image. The text boxes and lines stayed in placed, as drawn and formatted. As the article stated, the resolution was not the same, and after testing various options for the target monitor, I wasn't able to get the image as clear as I liked. The text in the boxes appear bolder than the original, and some of the text seemed to run together, and couldn't be read. But, this was such a great article, and knowing that Word does have the capability to extract images will be very useful for future projects. Thanks so much for answering my post, and for offering additional suggestions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Perhaps you'd have better luck exporting the graphic and inserting it as a picture. See http://www.gmayor.com/extract_images_from_word.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi Suzanne, Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
#8
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Thank you. I hope you find a solution that will be satisfactory for your
purposes. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message news ![]() Thanks for the additional suggestion, Suzanne. It's because of knowledgeable, extremely helpful people like you that I keep returning to these discussion groups. Have a wonderful weekend! ![]() "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Given the results you cite, you probably would get similarly disappointing results if you tried using Copy and then Paste Special as (experiment with different picture types). But it might be worth a shot. -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi suzanne, Thank you so much for that very helpful article! By following the instructions, I was able to extract the drawing and save it as an image. The text boxes and lines stayed in placed, as drawn and formatted. As the article stated, the resolution was not the same, and after testing various options for the target monitor, I wasn't able to get the image as clear as I liked. The text in the boxes appear bolder than the original, and some of the text seemed to run together, and couldn't be read. But, this was such a great article, and knowing that Word does have the capability to extract images will be very useful for future projects. Thanks so much for answering my post, and for offering additional suggestions. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: Perhaps you'd have better luck exporting the graphic and inserting it as a picture. See http://www.gmayor.com/extract_images_from_word.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi Suzanne, Thanks for the link. I've read the article, and tried doing what it suggests, but have had no success. It didn't matter if the page was linked, or not, the drawing object was added to the document as a total mess. I am trying to bring a page with a drawing object on it into another document. There is no standard typed text on the page. The page consists of only the drawing object - text boxes and lines. I tried bringing in the page with the drawing grouped and ungrouped, but the same thing happens each time. I can get it to go in, but the text boxes get messed up - spacing and font are different than the actual drawing object, and the lines end up out of place, too. Resizing, repositioning, and reformatting the boxes seems like a lot of work. Almost as much as just creating from scratch again. I've tried to copy and paste the object, but I don't get the usual smart tag after pasting that would give me a choice to match the source formatting. Do you know if there is any way to insert a drawing object into a new document, as it was originally designed? I know this was very time consuming to create - it would be a shame not to be able to reuse it, as needed. Thanks, again, for helping me out with this one. "Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: See http://daiya.mvps.org/includetext.htm -- Suzanne S. Barnhill Microsoft MVP (Word) Words into Type Fairhope, Alabama USA "Tammy" wrote in message ... Hi - Is it possible to insert only one, or two, pages from a document into a new document? Scenario is this: I have a user who has two drawings he created in one document. They were very time consuming, so instead of recreating them every time, he wants to be able to insert those drawings into new documents, as needed. Sometimes he may need both, other times, just one of them. I've tried saving the drawing as a quick part, hoping that would be a fix, but the drawing does not insert as it was created. Text box spacing changes, lines are all off, font is wrong... I've tried all the paste special options, but they behave similarly to the Quick Part. I've tried saving the doc with the drawings as a PDF, but only one page inserts, it's smaller than the original drawing, and it is not as clear as the original drawing, even after resizing. Besides that, he may want to edit the drawing in the new document. Is a template the only solution? He may not realize he's going to use the drawing until he is well into a new document. We are using Word 2007. Any suggestions? Thank you! |
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