Office 2011 for Mac has all kinds of shapes, including text boxes, shapes, SmartArt shapes, and content placeholders in PowerPoint. But that’s just the beginning. In addition to using the Font tab offerings, you can apply an incredible amount of interesting text effects.
The moment you click on or into a shape, the Format tab appears to the right of the Home tab on the Ribbon. Click the Format tab to display the formatting options in this tab of the Ribbon.
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Selecting shapes and text to format in Office 2011 for Mac
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Knowing what’s currently selected is very important when formatting text that’s inside a shape of some sort. You can format the text inside a shape as well as format the shape containing the text independently.
Select Text Effects Shadows to Apply to Your Text. This title slide is a great example of an opportunity to apply a drop shadow to text. With the text selected, I'll go to the Format menu here on the ribbon. There are a couple of options for how I could add drop shadow to text. And my favorite is to click on the Text Effects drop down. Highlight a section of text inside the applicable slide, or highlight the notes beneath the target slide, and then click the Speak command button. PowerPoint reads the highlighted text or notes. Select the text again, then press Ctrl+C to copy the text to your clipboard and then head back over to PowerPoint. In PowerPoint, paste the text wherever you want it by pressing Ctrl+V. Your text will now appear in the slide but without the highlight. Among these stylizing options, we have already explored Text Fills and Text Outlines — and we have also learned how to apply various WordArt styles in PowerPoint. Now let us learn how to apply and edit various text effects such as Shadow, Reflection, Glow, 3-D Rotation, Transform, etc.
When the shape itself is selected, the resize handles are shaded with color.
Text within shapes responds nicely to the Font section of the Ribbon, regardless of whether the shape or the text within the shape is selected. Because you can apply formatting options such as reflection and shadow to both the entire containing shape as well as text inside the shape, it’s important to pay attention to what you have selected, the shape or the text within a shape, before applying formatting.
Applying shape styles in Office 2011 for Mac
Like the Font group, when you use the Shape Styles tools in the Format tab of the Ribbon, the formatting changes are applied to the shape itself, as well as the text inside the shape. Many of the tools have an option that takes you to the Format Shape, Picture, or Text dialog. On the Ribbon’s Shape Styles group, you can find these interface options:
- Arrow buttons: Click the round arrow buttons at each end of the Shape Styles group to display more of the available styles.
- Submenu: Click at the bottom of the group near the middle to display all the styles on a submenu palette as a drop-down gallery.
- More Options: Click to display the Format Shape dialog.
- Fill format: Displays the color palette with a Fill Effects option. Choosing Fill Effects displays the Format Shape dialog.
- Line format: Formats the line that surrounds a shape.
Clicking the Effects button produces a submenu divided into five categories, each of which has additional submenu palettes with a wide variety of formatting effects. A click on a palette is all it takes to apply an effect. The categories are:
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- Shadow
- Reflection
- Glow
- Bevel
- 3-D Rotation
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Transparency is a measure of how much you can see through something when it is on top of another object or the background. Something that is adjusted to 100% transparent is invisible. When adjusted to 0% transparency, it is completely opaque. The fun comes in when you adjust transparency somewhere in between and pile objects on top of one another.