This video is a Microsoft Word 2007 tutorial on working with pictures. To insert a picture in your document, click on Insert and select Picture, then find the picture, select and insert it.
To resize the picture without distorting it, click and hold on the corner circles. You can adjust Brightness and Contrast by using the various choices within these settings. The Recolor setting gives you a number of options for changing the coloring of the picture, such as sepia, black and white, or grayscale. This setting also allows you to change the transparency of the picture.There are a number of preset picture styles to choose from, or you can make your own by selecting one of the many options for shapes, borders or lines. Picture Effects lets you add interesting effects to the picture. The Crop option can be used to crop out some of the background.The picture can be moved around within the text and you can change the text wrapping any way that you want, even placing it behind the text. You can also change the wrap points to various positions.
The little green ball on the top of the picture allows it to be rotated. A caption can be added with the Insert Caption option.
How to avoid having word crop a rotated picture. Kevinecahill_63 Aug 25, 2012, 11:21 PM. I inserted a portrait into a Word file. It came out sideways. So I rotated it 90 degrees. To crop a photo, click it to display the sizing handle dots, then select the cropping feature from the 'Picture' toolbar in Word 2003 or from the 'Size' group in the 'Picture Tools Format' ribbon in Word 2007 and 2010.
Which version of Word for Mac are you using? The steps might be a little different. If you are using Microsoft Word 2008 for Mac, here is what to do:.
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125430431/316191756.jpg)
![Word Word](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125430431/895836088.jpg)
In your open Word document, look at your menu bar and click Insert - Picture - From File. To insert your image. Make sure your Formatting Palette is open.
If not, click View - Formatting Palette in the menu bar. With your image selected, go to the Formatting Palette and see if the Picture category is revealed.
If not, click on Picture to open it. There should be a Crop button.
Once clicked, the edges in your image will change to show handles you can drag to crop the image. Once done, click the Crop button again to finish the crop. Hope this helps. BTW, I usually like to use Mac OS X's Preview (in Mac OS X versions 10.5) to get more powerful cropping and editing.
Not sure about 'delete the cropped sections of all images in a document to save file space'.