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I am creating a copy of our company stationery in Word. I understand the
space between our address lines is 14 pts. However, when I use Space After 14 points, the space between lines is much greater than on our printed letterhead. What space does Word normally create between paragraphs? I suspect it is the same as the font size is that the case? If my font size is 7.5 points and I want to have 14 points between paragraphs, what Space After do I need? Would a Space After of 6.5 points then give me exactly a 14 point gap? |
#2
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Hi Mary
Mary Ann wrote: I am creating a copy of our company stationery in Word. I understand the space between our address lines is 14 pts. that is 14 pt from base line to base line, right? Not "between" lines (measuring some form of whitespace) only, I presume. Baseline to baseline spacing is also called "leading." However, when I use Space After 14 points, the space between lines is much greater than on our printed letterhead. "Space after" is after each _paragraph_. What space does Word normally create between paragraphs? I suspect it is the same as the font size is that the case? No. When you choose "single", you get leading between 10% and 20%, depending on font size. If my font size is 7.5 points and I want to have 14 points between paragraphs, what Space After do I need? Would a Space After of 6.5 points then give me exactly a 14 point gap? Keep it as simple as possible: define 7.5 pt font size and "Exactly: 14 pt" leading, and no spacing before/after for your task. HTH Robert |
#3
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My reply
Thanks Robert thats great. A follow up question if baseline to baseline is called Leading is there a name for the white space measurement between lines and if I did need just that, how would I do it? Wanting to learn.... "Robert M. Franz (RMF)" wrote: Hi Mary Mary Ann wrote: I am creating a copy of our company stationery in Word. I understand the space between our address lines is 14 pts. that is 14 pt from base line to base line, right? Not "between" lines (measuring some form of whitespace) only, I presume. Baseline to baseline spacing is also called "leading." However, when I use Space After 14 points, the space between lines is much greater than on our printed letterhead. "Space after" is after each _paragraph_. What space does Word normally create between paragraphs? I suspect it is the same as the font size is that the case? No. When you choose "single", you get leading between 10% and 20%, depending on font size. If my font size is 7.5 points and I want to have 14 points between paragraphs, what Space After do I need? Would a Space After of 6.5 points then give me exactly a 14 point gap? Keep it as simple as possible: define 7.5 pt font size and "Exactly: 14 pt" leading, and no spacing before/after for your task. HTH Robert |
#4
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The distance beween lines is line spacing. The extra space between
paragraphs is Spacing Before/After. The line spacing can be set to Single (Auto), which includes the built-in font leading, Double (which doubles it), 1.5 lines (which is 150% of the Single spacing), or Multiple, which allows you to set a specific multiple of Single spacing, including fractions less than 1 (for example, you can compress line spacing just a hair by setting Multiple to .99 or .98, etc.). "At least" line spacing sets a minimum baseline-to-baseline measurement (in point) for line spacing. This measurement will be increased if you include text at a larger point size or any other element that requires more space (subject to the settings in the Compatibility Options). Single, Double, and other multiples are, in effect, also "at least" spacing and will expand as needed. In contrast, Exactly line spacing sets the baseline distance to an exact number of points regardless of the size of the text. -- 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. "Mary Ann" wrote in message ... My reply Thanks Robert thats great. A follow up question if baseline to baseline is called Leading is there a name for the white space measurement between lines and if I did need just that, how would I do it? Wanting to learn.... "Robert M. Franz (RMF)" wrote: Hi Mary Mary Ann wrote: I am creating a copy of our company stationery in Word. I understand the space between our address lines is 14 pts. that is 14 pt from base line to base line, right? Not "between" lines (measuring some form of whitespace) only, I presume. Baseline to baseline spacing is also called "leading." However, when I use Space After 14 points, the space between lines is much greater than on our printed letterhead. "Space after" is after each _paragraph_. What space does Word normally create between paragraphs? I suspect it is the same as the font size is that the case? No. When you choose "single", you get leading between 10% and 20%, depending on font size. If my font size is 7.5 points and I want to have 14 points between paragraphs, what Space After do I need? Would a Space After of 6.5 points then give me exactly a 14 point gap? Keep it as simple as possible: define 7.5 pt font size and "Exactly: 14 pt" leading, and no spacing before/after for your task. HTH Robert |
#5
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Thanks Suzanne!
"Suzanne S. Barnhill" wrote: The distance beween lines is line spacing. The extra space between paragraphs is Spacing Before/After. The line spacing can be set to Single (Auto), which includes the built-in font leading, Double (which doubles it), 1.5 lines (which is 150% of the Single spacing), or Multiple, which allows you to set a specific multiple of Single spacing, including fractions less than 1 (for example, you can compress line spacing just a hair by setting Multiple to .99 or .98, etc.). "At least" line spacing sets a minimum baseline-to-baseline measurement (in point) for line spacing. This measurement will be increased if you include text at a larger point size or any other element that requires more space (subject to the settings in the Compatibility Options). Single, Double, and other multiples are, in effect, also "at least" spacing and will expand as needed. In contrast, Exactly line spacing sets the baseline distance to an exact number of points regardless of the size of the text. -- 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. "Mary Ann" wrote in message ... My reply Thanks Robert thats great. A follow up question if baseline to baseline is called Leading is there a name for the white space measurement between lines and if I did need just that, how would I do it? Wanting to learn.... "Robert M. Franz (RMF)" wrote: Hi Mary Mary Ann wrote: I am creating a copy of our company stationery in Word. I understand the space between our address lines is 14 pts. that is 14 pt from base line to base line, right? Not "between" lines (measuring some form of whitespace) only, I presume. Baseline to baseline spacing is also called "leading." However, when I use Space After 14 points, the space between lines is much greater than on our printed letterhead. "Space after" is after each _paragraph_. What space does Word normally create between paragraphs? I suspect it is the same as the font size is that the case? No. When you choose "single", you get leading between 10% and 20%, depending on font size. If my font size is 7.5 points and I want to have 14 points between paragraphs, what Space After do I need? Would a Space After of 6.5 points then give me exactly a 14 point gap? Keep it as simple as possible: define 7.5 pt font size and "Exactly: 14 pt" leading, and no spacing before/after for your task. HTH Robert |
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