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#1
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(4 sheet, 16 page booklet newsletter created in Word 2000, 2 sheets per
page, default printer an ancient laserjet, actually printing on HP Photosmart 1215, manually duplexed.) 1. http://word.mvps.org/FAQs/ Thanks!!!!! An outstanding resource I've used many times. I'm always learning and re-learning there. (But couldn't you change that unreadable orange color? I end up doing a mouse over so I can read the headings in green.) 2. Floating graphics, what's the best way? By themselves, in a frame, or in a floating table? 3. I want outlined boxes on the mailing page for stamp and label placement. Again, what's the best way? Table, frame, autoshape, or text box? 4. For pull quotes there's a floating graphic and a floating 3 column table for the text. Is there a better way to do this? 5. I have a graphical TTF font that I use for bullets and a couple of graphics, but it doesn't stick to the document using 'Embed True Type Fonts'. Any ideas? (Yes, there is a style for it in the template.) 6. Someone else printed it and had serious problems, enough that he'll "never do that again!" :-) He has Word '02 and an HP PSC 2410 printer, which has the same margins as my HP Photosmart 1215 that works fine. Any ideas why he had so much trouble? (Reversed pages, huge swap file (All the floating objects I assume.), only printed one book at a time...) TIA John |
#2
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Hi John,
2. Floating graphics, what's the best way? By themselves, in a frame, or in a floating table? That's a tough one, because it sorta "depends". Usually, I use a frame because - they (and the content) are visible in all views - the content can be picked up for TOCs, etc. - I can create (and edit) a style with a frame and its properties as part of the style definition The one thing, in more recent versions of Word, that makes me hesitant about frames is that the anchor is no longer really associated with the paragraph next to which you see it. Generally, this isn't a problem, but it can be one if you need to shift a lot of text around. 3. I want outlined boxes on the mailing page for stamp and label placement. Again, what's the best way? Table, frame, autoshape, or text box? In this case, I'd say table, although I'd only float it if absolutely necessary. (Anything that "floats" is a potential problem.) Other than that, I'd want to know how you plan to USE these areas (mail merge, VBA, just print the boxes...) 4. For pull quotes there's a floating graphic and a floating 3 column table for the text. Is there a better way to do this? I'm not clear on how your layout is supposed to be (the floating graphic?). But generally, I'd create a style with the necessary left and right indents. Easier to apply than inserting a table, and easier to adjust if something changes (as opposed to having to resize each and every table if you decide it needs to be that much narrower or wider or something) 5. I have a graphical TTF font that I use for bullets and a couple of graphics, but it doesn't stick to the document using 'Embed True Type Fonts'. Any ideas? (Yes, there is a style for it in the template.) If you don't get an answer to this, here, try in the word.printingfonts newsgroup. 6. Someone else printed it and had serious problems, enough that he'll "never do that again!" :-) He has Word '02 and an HP PSC 2410 printer, which has the same margins as my HP Photosmart 1215 that works fine. Any ideas why he had so much trouble? (Reversed pages, huge swap file (All the floating objects I assume.), only printed one book at a time...) Again, I'd ask this in the printingfonts newsgroup. At a guess, he may have less RAM on his machine and/or in the printer. Perhaps he also needs an updated printer driver. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) |
#3
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A few more comments:
4. For pull quotes, if you want them to overlap the space between two columns (as is common), use a frame. 5 and 6. Your best bet for portability is to convert to PDF. -- 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. "Cindy M -WordMVP-" wrote in message news:VA.0000a332.0030f505@speedy... Hi John, 2. Floating graphics, what's the best way? By themselves, in a frame, or in a floating table? That's a tough one, because it sorta "depends". Usually, I use a frame because - they (and the content) are visible in all views - the content can be picked up for TOCs, etc. - I can create (and edit) a style with a frame and its properties as part of the style definition The one thing, in more recent versions of Word, that makes me hesitant about frames is that the anchor is no longer really associated with the paragraph next to which you see it. Generally, this isn't a problem, but it can be one if you need to shift a lot of text around. 3. I want outlined boxes on the mailing page for stamp and label placement. Again, what's the best way? Table, frame, autoshape, or text box? In this case, I'd say table, although I'd only float it if absolutely necessary. (Anything that "floats" is a potential problem.) Other than that, I'd want to know how you plan to USE these areas (mail merge, VBA, just the boxes...) 4. For pull quotes there's a floating graphic and a floating 3 column table for the text. Is there a better way to do this? I'm not clear on how your layout is supposed to be (the floating graphic?). But generally, I'd create a style with the necessary left and right indents. Easier to apply than inserting a table, and easier to adjust if something changes (as opposed to having to resize each and every table if you decide it needs to be that much narrower or wider or something) 5. I have a graphical TTF font that I use for bullets and a couple of graphics, but it doesn't stick to the document using 'Embed True Type Fonts'. Any ideas? (Yes, there is a style for it in the template.) If you don't get an answer to this, here, try in the word.printingfonts newsgroup. 6. Someone else printed it and had serious problems, enough that he'll "never do that again!" :-) He has Word '02 and an HP PSC 2410 printer, which has the same margins as my HP Photosmart 1215 that works fine. Any ideas why he had so much trouble? (Reversed pages, huge swap file (All the floating objects I assume.), only printed one book at a time...) Again, I'd ask this in the printingfonts newsgroup. At a guess, he may have less RAM on his machine and/or in the printer. Perhaps he also needs an updated printer driver. Cindy Meister INTER-Solutions, Switzerland http://homepage.swissonline.ch/cindymeister (last update Jun 8 2004) http://www.word.mvps.org This reply is posted in the Newsgroup; please post any follow question or reply in the newsgroup and not by e-mail :-) |
#4
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Images of cover pages and inside pages:
http://www.jwfunke.net/crossroads/crossroads.htm Cindy M -WordMVP- wrote: 3. I want outlined boxes on the mailing page for stamp and label placement. Again, what's the best way? Table, frame, autoshape, or text box? In this case, I'd say table, although I'd only float it if absolutely necessary. (Anything that "floats" is a potential problem.) Other than that, I'd want to know how you plan to USE these areas (mail merge, VBA, just print the boxes...) The only use is so stamps and labels are placed correctly on the hard copy, as other people will be doing it. Right now, I have an inline table for return and logo, an empty outlined frame where the label goes and an empty outlined frame where the stamp goes. 4. For pull quotes there's a floating graphic and a floating 3 column table for the text. Is there a better way to do this? I'm not clear on how your layout is supposed to be (the floating graphic?). But generally, I'd create a style with the necessary left and right indents. Easier to apply than inserting a table, and easier to adjust if something changes (as opposed to having to resize each and every table if you decide it needs to be that much narrower or wider or something) Just a clip art picture under the text. Seen on page 3. The caption on page 2 is similar, the only difference is that it's an autoshape instead of clip art. John |
#5
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Cindy M -WordMVP- wrote:
5. I have a graphical TTF font that I use for bullets and a couple of graphics, but it doesn't stick to the document using 'Embed True Type Fonts'. Any ideas? (Yes, there is a style for it in the template.) If you don't get an answer to this, here, try in the word.printingfonts newsgroup. The font in question is set for "No Embedding Allowed." (Text below snipped from word.printingfonts.) John Thomas Ferguson wrote: Either TrueType or OpenType fonts can be embedded depending on the permission level set in the font file. As a matter of Copyright, font file owners have the sole right to determine if the font is to be embeddable, and if so, at what level of use. TrueType fonts have embedding permissions encoded within them that determine how they can be used by tools that convert them into the embedded font format. There are four levels of font embedding: a.. No-embedding permissions are used by a small proportion of available fonts. The creators of these fonts have decided not to allow embedding. Some foundries set their fonts to no-embedding, but offer upgrades to embeddable versions. If you come across a no-embedding font that you would like to use, contact the supplier and ask about a possible upgrade. b.. Print and preview fonts can be embedded, but do not allow editing. c.. Editable fonts can be embedded and fully edited but are only temporarily installed on the system. d.. Installable fonts are installed and remain on the system. In order to know if the font is embeddable and at what level, you would have to contact the supplier or creator or have a sample you can examine using the TrueType properties shell extension available from Microsoft's typography site on the www. http://www.microsoft.com/typography/...sOverview.mspx Tom MSMVP Windows shell/user |
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