Forum Discussion
Wilfred180
Jun 10, 2022Copper Contributor
Problems with inserting pictures Word 2007
I have a couple of problems with Microsoft Word 2007. I am aware that this is a superseded version which is no longer supported by Microsoft. I have been retired from office life for twenty years, ...
Jun 10, 2022
As far as the pdf issue is concerned, you should be able to download the save as pdf add-on for Office 2007 from:
https://filehippo.com/download_2007-microsoft-office-add-in-microsoft-save-as-pdf-or-xps/
An alternative is to use one of the free, very capable, pdf printers such as PrimoPDF.
As far as the pictures are concerned I would suggest making use of a table if necessary rather than text boxes, however, if the images are inserted with the layout set to In-line with Text, that may not be required.
How are you wanting to layout the pictures?
https://filehippo.com/download_2007-microsoft-office-add-in-microsoft-save-as-pdf-or-xps/
An alternative is to use one of the free, very capable, pdf printers such as PrimoPDF.
As far as the pictures are concerned I would suggest making use of a table if necessary rather than text boxes, however, if the images are inserted with the layout set to In-line with Text, that may not be required.
How are you wanting to layout the pictures?
- Wilfred180Jun 10, 2022Copper Contributor
Thank you, Doug Robbins, for your reply.
I have been able to download and install the PDF app, to create a PDF file. Thank you, and that is one problem solved. However the other problem, concerning insertion of photographs, still remains.
I did a little experimenting, following your suggestion to use a one-cell-table, but this has not overcome the problem. As I indicated in my first enquiry, I have had a great deal of experience with insertion of photographs inside text boxes. One of the significant benefits of using a text box to hold a photograph is that it is then very easy to place a caption under the photograph, resulting in the “photo-with-caption” being separate from the surrounding text.
I will try to explain exactly what happens on my computer when I try to insert a photo in a text box.
Firstly, I place the cursor inside the text box. This highlights the text box with 8 small sensitive spots (one on each corner, and one in the centre of each side of the text box. These sensitive spots enable the text box to be “stretched” as required to occupy the desired space in the main document.
With the cursor inside the text box, I then select the “Insert” tab in the toolbar, and this then allows me to specify the kind of object I wish to insert, from a selection of icons just below the toolbar. When I select the “Picture” icon, a separate window opens (very much like the file-explorer window), and then I am able to select the required photo. After the required photo has been selected, a new “picture frame” appears inside the text box, which should include the required image, but no image appears in this picture frame, but the picture frame has 8 sensitive spots which enable the photo “picture frame” to be stretched to the required size inside the text box. Positioning the cursor on any of these spots does not cause the picture to appear, nor does a left-click of the mouse cause the image to appear. HOWEVER, if the left mouse button is clicked and held down on one of these sensitive spots, AND THEN THE CURSOR IS MOVED, the image appears, but the image immediately disappears when the left mouse button is released.
I know that this is a bit of a long-winded explanation, but I wish to give a clear indication of the problem which I have. As indicated in my first enquiry, I cannot think of any reason why this problem should have arisen, other than possibly because I am now using Windows 10.
I find it interesting that Microsoft Publisher 2007 allows pictures to be inserted successfully. Even so, I wish to use Microsoft Word to complete the project I have undertaken, which requires insertion of photos into the story.
- Jun 10, 2022How are you wanting to layout the pictures?
I would suggest that you simply insert them into the body of the document and set the layout so that they are In line with text, in which case the picture is inserted into a separate paragraph, which can be formatted to be kept together with the next paragraph into which you insert the caption. In that way, the picture and the caption will always be kept together.- Wilfred180Jun 10, 2022Copper ContributorThank you Doug for a very quick response. I have tried your suggestion of just inserting a photo directly into the text document, rather than into a text box, but that has not been successful and the problem remains.
It is easy enough to specify where I want the photo to be placed – whether into a table-cell, or a text box, or directly into the text. It is also easy enough to specify an individual photo which shall be inserted. The problem is that the required image does not appear in the document as required.
Based on my previous experience I still wish to use text boxes, because these offer a very convenient method for controlling the exact placement of photos on a printed page.
In each scenario the image can be made to become visible (but only briefly) in the document while a sensitive spot of the “picture frame” is being dragged by the mouse, but as soon as the mouse button is released the image disappears.
Do you think that it might be a “Windows 10” problem? Can you think of any other possible cause for this problem?
I am trying to create a PDF file which can be submitted to a printing company which specializes in low-volume book printing. The book I wish to publish is an autobiography of my wife’s one remaining Auntie, who is 97 years old. The book is anticipated to be about 220 pages, A5 size, with about 40,000 words and 40 photographs which shall be individually captioned.