Title: How To Create a Brochure
1How To Create a Brochure
- Planning 10
- Created by Karoline Monkvik
2Presentation Goals
- After completion of this program, you will be
able to - Start with a pre-designed Publisher publication
(Brochure) and adapt it to create your own
publication. - Add text to a brochure, revise and reposition the
text. - Add a picture to a brochure, change how the
picture looks, and control how text wraps around
it.
3Begin with a Brochure Wizard
- When you begin with a Brochure Wizard, you don't
have to worry about setting up or designing your
publication. All you have to do is select the
brochure design that you want and then replace
the placeholder text and pictures with your own
text and pictures.
4How To Create with Wizard
- Here is how you create a three-panel or
four-panel publication from a Brochure Wizard - 1. Start Publisher. In the New Publication task
pane, under New from a design, click Publications
for Print, and then click Brochures. - 2. In the Preview Gallery on the right, click the
design that you want. - 3. In the Brochure Options task pane, for Page
size, click 3-panel or 4-panel. - 4. Click a placeholder text block, and then type
the text that you want.
5How To Create with Wizard continued
- 5. Right-click a placeholder picture, point to
Change Picture, and then click the type of
picture that you want to use. Note If you
right-click a picture and you don't see Change
Picture on the menu, click the picture. You
should see grey handles around the picture.
Right-click it again and point to Change Picture. - 6. If you want to change the color scheme of the
publication to better reflect your company's
character or to match your company's existing
color scheme, click Color Schemes in the Brochure
Options task pane. - 7. To apply a color scheme, click the scheme that
you want under Apply a color scheme. - To create a publication color scheme that exactly
matches the colors that are used in other company
materials, click Custom color scheme.
6Independent Elements
- Everything in a Publisher publication, including
a block of text, is an independent element. You
can place each element exactly where you want it,
and you can control its size, shape, and
appearance. - It's not so unusual, even in word-processing
programs, for pictures to act as independent
elements. What makes Publisher particularly
flexible is that you have the same control over
text as you do over pictures. - Because each of these elements is independent,
you can treat each one individually. If you
resize and re-color the line that defines the
column, for example, you don't affect the
masthead. Or, if you change the font size and
color for the brochure title, the other headings
and body text remain unchanged.
7Adding Text(text box)
- To add a new text box you would
- Click the Text Box tool on the Objects
toolbar. (By default, when you open Publisher,
the Objects toolbar extends vertically along the
left side of the Publisher window.) - Drag to create a rectangle on the page.
- Type your text in the resulting text box
(surrounded by round handles).
8Adding Text Tips
- Don't worry about where you place a text box when
you first create it, or what size it is. You can
move the text box anywhere you want on (or off)
the page, and you can change its size at any
time. - The table below shows three easy ways to modify a
text box once it's on the page.
To First Then
Move a text box Position the pointer over the text box boundary. When the cursor becomes a four-headed arrow , click and drag.
Resize a text box Click the text box and position the pointer over one of the round handles. When the cursor becomes a two-headed arrow , click and drag.
Rotate a text box Click the text box and position the pointer over the green rotation handle. When the cursor becomes a circle , click and drag in the direction you want the text to rotate.
9Customizing Text Boxes
- These three text boxes demonstrate how much
freedom you have to customize the appearance of
text and text boxes. - If you want to customize the look of a
publication, there are all kinds of things you
can do to change the appearance of text and the
text box that contains it. - For example, to change the appearance of a text
selection, on the Format menu, you can click - Font to change the font, font size, font color,
or style. - Paragraph to change the alignment, indentation,
line spacing, and line and paragraph breaks. - Bullets and Numbering to add or change the style
of bullets and numbers. - And to change the appearance of a text box, you
can use the Text Box command (on the Format menu)
to - Add a border around the text box.
- Change the background or border color.
- Rotate the text box.
- Change the margin between the text and text box
boundary.
10Pictures (Frames)
- In the previous slides, you learned that all text
in Publisher exists within containers called text
boxes. Likewise, each picture exists within a
container called a frame. Frames give you the
same control over pictures that text boxes give
you with text. You can place a picture anywhere
on a pageincluding inside a text boxand you can
change its size and appearance. - Here you will learn how to add pictures to
publications, how to move and resize them, how to
change the way pictures look, and how to control
the way text wraps around them.
11Pictures (Frames) Continued..
- We're using the term picture inclusively to refer
to a variety of graphic formats and sources,
including - 1. A rectangle, circle, arrow, line, or
AutoShape. - 2. An independent graphic file, in a format such
as Graphics Interchange Format (GIF), Joint
Photographic Experts Group (JPEG), Bitmap (BMP),
Windows Metafile Format (WMF), Tagged Image File
Format (TIF), or Portable Network Graphics (PNG). - 3. Clip art.
- 4. A scanned photograph or a picture taken with a
digital camera.
12Adding a Picture
- There are two ways to add a new picture to a
publication - 1. Replace a placeholder picture in an existing
frame, using the Change Picture command. - 2. Create a new frame with the Picture Frame tool
, and put a picture in it. - If you don't know yet exactly which picture you
want to use, you can add a picture placeholder to
a publication by inserting an empty picture
frame. On the Insert menu, point to Picture, and
then click Empty Picture Frame.
13Move and Resize a Picture
To Do this
Move a picture Drag it to a new location.
Resize a picture and maintain the original proportions Press SHIFT, and then drag a corner handle.
Crop a picture to eliminate unwanted portions Click the Crop tool on the Picture toolbar. Position the tool over a black cropping handle, and then drag.
14Changing a Pictures Appearance
To Do this
Add a colored or artistic border Click the Format Picture tool and use the Colors and Lines tab.
Add a colored background Click the Format Picture tool and use the Colors and Lines tab. Note The colored background will be visible only in pictures that have transparent areas or do not fill the entire frame.
Recolor the picture Click the Format Picture tool and use the Picture tab.
Adjust contrast or brightness Click the contrast or brightness tools More Contrast Less Contrast More Brightness Less Brightness
15Wrapping Text Around a Picture
- You can set up different relationships between
pictures and text by controlling how the text
wraps around a picture. - You can choose text wrapping options by clicking
the Text Wrapping tool on the Picture
toolbar.
16Wrapping Text Continued
- Top and Bottom -Text stops at the top of the
picture's frame and continues after the bottom of
the frame. - Tight - Text wraps around the outline of the
picture itself rather than around the frame. - Square - Text wraps around the frame rather
than around the picture itself. - None - Text acts as if the picture isn't
there.
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