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From: ever90321 on 4 Mar 2010 19:10 Hi, I've done a number of web searches, trying to find the best way to created rotated text (at any angle) in Word 2003. There are several ways to do this, but so far, none have been exactly what I want. Here is what I've tried: 1) I tried the Copy text, then Paste Special -> Windows Metafile trick, and this works fine on the screen, but when printed, the text appears as a garbled mess. This is on two completely different printers, so I don't think it's a driver issue. 2) I then tried Copy, Paste Special again, using the Metafile above as the source, but this time choosing PNG or GIF from the list. This works, but the output is blocky and not anti-aliased. I suppose I could try cleaning it up in a paint program, but I don't really want to do this. 3) I tried WordArt for the very first time, and this prints fine, except the WordArt options are all for highly stylized text. Is there no way to create "plain" WordArt ? If anyone has other suggestions, I'd be happy to hear them. Thanks! Todd
From: ybS2okj on 4 Mar 2010 21:02 Have you tried formatting your text in Excel and then paste Special in Word? You can do this quite easily like this: 1) Enter your text in excel in the normal way; 2) Expand or AutoFit the column of your text; 3) Now go to Format, Cells, Alignment tab 4) Change the degrees from the drop down box up or down. 5) Once satisfied, copy the entire cell (CTRL+C) 6) Go to Word and Edit, Paste Special, Select Microsoft Office Excel Object 7) You are done. hth <ever90321(a)mypacks.net> wrote in message news:49ffd50c-8c5f-4752-bb3c-6eedb59f558a(a)15g2000yqi.googlegroups.com... > Hi, > > I've done a number of web searches, trying to find the best way to > created rotated text (at any angle) in Word 2003. There are several > ways to do this, but so far, none have been exactly what I want. Here > is what I've tried: > > 1) I tried the Copy text, then Paste Special -> Windows Metafile > trick, and this works fine on the screen, but when printed, the text > appears as a garbled mess. This is on two completely different > printers, so I don't think it's a driver issue. > > 2) I then tried Copy, Paste Special again, using the Metafile above as > the source, but this time choosing PNG or GIF from the list. This > works, but the output is blocky and not anti-aliased. I suppose I > could try cleaning it up in a paint program, but I don't really want > to do this. > > 3) I tried WordArt for the very first time, and this prints fine, > except the WordArt options are all for highly stylized text. Is there > no way to create "plain" WordArt ? > > If anyone has other suggestions, I'd be happy to hear them. > > Thanks! > Todd
From: LVTravel on 4 Mar 2010 22:00 <ever90321(a)mypacks.net> wrote in message news:49ffd50c-8c5f-4752-bb3c-6eedb59f558a(a)15g2000yqi.googlegroups.com... > Hi, > > I've done a number of web searches, trying to find the best way to > created rotated text (at any angle) in Word 2003. There are several > ways to do this, but so far, none have been exactly what I want. Here > is what I've tried: > > 1) I tried the Copy text, then Paste Special -> Windows Metafile > trick, and this works fine on the screen, but when printed, the text > appears as a garbled mess. This is on two completely different > printers, so I don't think it's a driver issue. > > 2) I then tried Copy, Paste Special again, using the Metafile above as > the source, but this time choosing PNG or GIF from the list. This > works, but the output is blocky and not anti-aliased. I suppose I > could try cleaning it up in a paint program, but I don't really want > to do this. > > 3) I tried WordArt for the very first time, and this prints fine, > except the WordArt options are all for highly stylized text. Is there > no way to create "plain" WordArt ? > > If anyone has other suggestions, I'd be happy to hear them. > > Thanks! > Todd In Word Art choose the shape from the gallery on the top line with the curved text (middle position.) Once the text is on the screen then choose to edit Word Art Shape and choose the straight line (top left icon.) Once that is done then you select the Edit Text icon and set the Font and also the size of the text in points. This is as close to freely rotating standard text as you will find in Word.
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