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date: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 17:02:01 -0700,    group: microsoft.public.word.drawing.graphics        back       


Insert a picture as BACKGROUND or WATERMARK?   
w/ Windows XP & Word 2003.  My goal is to create a flyer for a "4th of July" 
party, with a faint/paled American flag BEHIND the text.  With that said, 
along with the last 4 hrs. of research, I'm thinking that: (1) I need to go 
with BACKGROUND because WATERMARK will cause the flag to be mono-color.  (2) 
Though I want to specifically align certain lines of text over the red and 
white strips, while avioding the blue field (seems that I read somewhere 
today) that it's better to begin with the text, add the picture and then 
reposition the words.  Does this sound right?

"The Insertion Virgin"; Bald Tom

P.S.  Any other hints, would be appreciated.     Thanx
date: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 17:02:01 -0700   author:   Bald Tom Bald

Re: Insert a picture as BACKGROUND or WATERMARK?   
I'm not sure why you think that a "watermark" would be monocolor. A 
"background" won't print unless you specify it in Print Options.

But in your case, since you're dealing with a single page, a graphic 
inserted Behind Text will do what you want (you'll need to use 
"washout"--the same setting used for watermarks--for the color setting. 
You'll need to diddle with the line spacing (or Space Before/After) on the 
text to align it with the white stripes.

Alternatively, you could insert the graphic In Line With Text and use text 
boxes (No Line, No Fill) to place text over it.

-- 
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA

"Bald Tom" <Bald Tom@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message 
news:8B3BC978-2CDA-48B1-A2BB-F1DB822EBE57@microsoft.com...
> w/ Windows XP & Word 2003.  My goal is to create a flyer for a "4th of 
> July"
> party, with a faint/paled American flag BEHIND the text.  With that said,
> along with the last 4 hrs. of research, I'm thinking that: (1) I need to 
> go
> with BACKGROUND because WATERMARK will cause the flag to be mono-color. 
> (2)
> Though I want to specifically align certain lines of text over the red and
> white strips, while avioding the blue field (seems that I read somewhere
> today) that it's better to begin with the text, add the picture and then
> reposition the words.  Does this sound right?
>
> "The Insertion Virgin"; Bald Tom
>
> P.S.  Any other hints, would be appreciated.     Thanx
>
date: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 21:10:27 -0500   author:   Suzanne S. Barnhill

Re: Insert a picture as BACKGROUND or WATERMARK?   
On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 17:02:01 -0700, Bald Tom <Bald
Tom@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:

>w/ Windows XP & Word 2003.  My goal is to create a flyer for a "4th of July" 
>party, with a faint/paled American flag BEHIND the text.  With that said, 
>along with the last 4 hrs. of research, I'm thinking that: (1) I need to go 
>with BACKGROUND because WATERMARK will cause the flag to be mono-color.  (2) 
>Though I want to specifically align certain lines of text over the red and 
>white strips, while avioding the blue field (seems that I read somewhere 
>today) that it's better to begin with the text, add the picture and then 
>reposition the words.  Does this sound right?
>
>"The Insertion Virgin"; Bald Tom
>
>P.S.  Any other hints, would be appreciated.     Thanx

I'll give you a "probably not" and a "maybe". :-)

You can try setting the picture as a background, but try printing one copy
before you go any farther. And don't trust Print Preview; actually print it. You
may find that although Word shows a single large background picture, the printed
copy has a dozen or so smaller copies tiled over the page. I think it's a
printer driver bug, but it might be something else; anyway, it seems to be
fairly common, but it affects only backgrounds and not watermarks.

I don't believe your statement about "mono-color" is correct. The usual
watermark is given greater brightness and less contrast than the original
picture, but it's still in the original colors. Anyway, you can turn that off by
clearing the Washout check box in the Watermark dialog.

As far as whether it's better to put in the text before or after inserting the
picture, I don't think it really makes any difference. A hint, though: Display
the Forms toolbar and use the Frame button to create floating boxes that you can
type the text into and then position them. The frames are easier to deal with
than text boxes. For one thing, they default to being transparent -- though you
do have to right-click the frame's edge, click Borders & Shading, and choose no
border (which you also have to do for text boxes in the Format Text Box dialog).

--
Regards,
Jay Freedman
Microsoft Word MVP        FAQ: http://word.mvps.org
Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit.
date: Thu, 12 Jun 2008 22:17:11 -0400   author:   Jay Freedman

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