Teach Yourself VISUALLY Microsoft 365. Paul McFedries

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      You can modify an object’s appearance using a variety of Ribbon buttons that appear on a contextual tab specific to the type of graphic object you select.

      Crop a Picture

Snapshot of crop a picture.

      You can use the Crop tool to create a better fit, to omit a portion of the image, or to focus the viewer on an important area of the image. You can crop a picture, screenshot, or clip art image. When you crop an object, you remove vertical and/or horizontal edges from the object. The Crop tool is located on the Picture Format tab on the Ribbon, which appears when you click the object you want to crop.

      Rotate or Flip a Graphic

Snapshot of rotate or flip a graphic.

      After you insert an object such as a piece of clip art or a photo from your hard drive into a Word document, you may find that the object appears upside down or inverted. Fortunately, Word makes it easy to flip or rotate an object. For example, you might flip a clip art image to face another direction, or rotate an arrow object to point elsewhere on the page. Or, for dramatic effect, you can rotate or flip pictures, clip art images, and some shapes. Keep in mind that you cannot rotate text boxes.

      Correct Images

Snapshot of correct Images.

      You can change the brightness and contrast of a picture, clip art, or a screenshot to improve its appearance, and you can sharpen or soften an image. Suppose, for example, the image object you have inserted in your Word, Excel, or PowerPoint file is slightly blurry, or lacks contrast. You find the image-correction tools on the Picture Tools Format tab on the Ribbon, which appears when you click to select the object to which you want to apply the effect.

      Make Color Adjustments

Snapshot of make color adjustments.

      You can adjust the color of a picture, screenshot, or clip art image by increasing or decreasing color saturation or color tone. You can also recolor a picture, screenshot, or clip art image to create an interesting effect.

      Color saturation controls the amount of red and green in a photo, whereas color tone controls the amount of blue and yellow.

      Remove the Background of an Image

Snapshot of remove background.

      Add an Effect

Snapshot of add an effect.

      You can use tools to assign unique and interesting special effects to objects. For example, you can apply a shadow effect, create a mirrored reflection, apply a glow effect, soften the object’s edges, make a bevel effect, or generate a 3-D rotation effect. You can find these tools on the Picture Format tab of the Ribbon, which appears when you click to select the object to which you want to apply the effect. (Note that the Picture Effects tool is not available in Publisher.)

      Apply a Style to a Graphic

Snapshot of apply a style to a graphic.

      You can apply a predefined style to a shape, text box, WordArt graphic, picture, or clip art image. Styles contain predefined colors and effects and help you quickly add interest to a graphic. Applying a style removes other effects that you may have applied, such as shadow or bevel effects. Sample styles appear on the Picture Format or Shape Format tab when you click the More button (9781119893516-ma022) in the Picture Styles or Shape Styles group.

      Add a Picture Border or Drawing Outline

Snapshot of add a picture border or drawing outline.

      You can add a border to a picture, shape, text box, WordArt graphic, clip art image, or screenshot. Using the Picture Border or Shape Outline tool, which appears on the Picture Format or Shape Format tab, you can control the thickness of the border, set a style for the border — a solid or dashed line — and change the color of the border.

      Apply Artistic Effects

Snapshot of apply artistic effects.

      You can apply artistic effects to pictures, screenshots, and clip art to liven them up. For example, you can make an image appear as though it was rendered in marker, pencil, chalk, or paint. Other artistic effects might remind you of mosaics, film grain, or glass. You find the Artistic Effects button on the Picture Format tab, which appears when you click to select the object to which you want to apply the effect.

      Working with Microsoft 365 Files Online

      Today, people are on the go but often want to take work with them to do while sitting in the waiting room of their doctor’s office, at the airport, or in a hotel room. Using Microsoft 365, you can work from anywhere using almost any device available because, among other reasons, it works with SharePoint and OneDrive, Microsoft’s cloud space. From OneDrive, you can log in to cloud space and, using Microsoft 365 web apps — essentially, tools with which you are already familiar — get to work.

      Sign In to the Cloud

Snapshot of signing in to Office Online.

      Signing in to Office Online or to your Microsoft 365 subscription connects your Microsoft 365 apps to the world beyond your computer. Office Online offers free access to the online, limited-edition versions of the Microsoft 365 apps that you can use on any computer. Purchasing a Microsoft 365 subscription gives you access to full versions of the Microsoft 365 desktop programs and the online versions of the products. Signing in gives you access to online pictures and clip art stored at Office.com and enables Microsoft 365 to synchronize files between your computer, OneDrive, and SharePoint.

      OneDrive and Microsoft 365

Snapshot of onedrive.

      OneDrive

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