![]() Now, Excel rivals some of the best graphic programs out there in features and effects. Everything was low-resolution and there were no effects or color corrections, or styles. NOTE: And here is where Excel really excels in the graphics arena! In the early years, Microsoft’s graphics were horrendous. The Picture Tools/Format tab and a menu appears with all the cool features you can use to enhance your pictures, such as Picture Styles Adjustments for Brightness/Contract and Sharpen/Soften Corrections Color, Saturation, and Tone adjustments Artistic Effects Remove Backgrounds and Compress, Change, or Reset Picture. Excel drops the picture onto your spreadsheet. Browse through the options, select an appropriate image for your project, then click the Insert button.Ģ. ![]() Press Enter or click the magnifying glass. Or, choose Insert > Online Pictures and enter a keyword/search term in the Bing search box. For Pictures, choose Insert > Pictures (from one of your drives), navigate to the correct folder, select the image, and click the Insert button. Once in Excel-if the bullet picture has handles-you can edit it, change colors, format it, and apply Artistic Effects like you can with any other graphic or picture.Ĭonvert Icons to Shapes you can edit Picture Tools & Stylesġ. Highlight all three and change the size to 100 points (or so), then Copy and Paste into Excel.ģ. After it drops into your document, select a symbol, and then a font. First, click the Picture button and choose an image from Bing search or from a file on one of your drives. When the New Bullet window appears, choose Symbol, Picture, or Font to create your custom bullets. For example, in MS Word, select Home > Paragraph, then click the Bullets button expansion arrow (top left in the Paragraph group) > Define New Bullet. See the next section on Picture Tools for instructions about this process.ġ. Note that some fonts work and some do not. NOTE: You can create custom bullets using symbols, fonts, and pictures in MS Word, then copy and paste them into Excel as “pictures,” which can then access all the graphic/picture features.
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