To find customizable slide templates and themes, you can explore the business presentations templates or search by PowerPoint templates. Once you find a template that resonates with you, customize it by changing its color scheme, add in your own photos, and swap out the font.

After you've chosen a PowerPoint template to use, customize it. Explore [design tips] on how to customize a deck that resonates with your brand while putting emphasis on the topic at hand. Play with other design elements, like photo shapes, to make each slide unique.


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Start from scratch by creating your own PowerPoint template. Follow tips for designs and business presentations so that your unique template is cohesive and relevant to your brand. Incorporate your brand's color scheme and graphics so that all your slides aren't text only.

You can get PowerPoint templates that have modern designs, animated ones, or even hand-drawn art in each slide. The color schemes range from bold to subtle. Each template's slides are also organized based on what you may want to include in your presentation. You can use the template as a starting point and customize its specific details from theme.

Theme colors contain four text and background colors, six accent colors, and two hyperlink colors. Under Sample, you can see how the text font styles and colors look before you settle on your color combination.

When you save your theme to the Themes folder, it'll automatically show in the gallery under Custom Themes. If your theme isn't in the Themes folder, click Browse for Themes to look for your theme in its saved location.

Using a theme gives your presentation a harmonious appearance with minimal effort. Text and graphics automatically take on the size, colors, and placement defined by the theme, which means less manual work as you create individual slides.

After you create a theme, it's located on the Design tab in the Themes gallery. To try out a theme, rest your mouse pointer over a thumbnail in the Themes gallery and notice how the look of your slide changes.

I am trying to copy slides from one presentation to another, and want the slides that I'm pasting in to take the characteristics of the destination presentation - particularly picking up the footer, fonts.


I've done this by copying the slide from the L/H navigation pane, navigating to the source presentation and pasting "Use destination theme" but the Footer is not picked-up on the pasted slides - the other objects are (boxes etc).


I've changed themes, tried all sorts but cannot get this to work.

I read your scenario as you have copied a slide from the Source slideshow and have pasted it into the Destination slideshow with Use Destination Theme. You are looking to have everything go across (the content has done so correctly) but the footer has not.

The part I am confused on is, are you looking to have the exact footer from the Source slideshow and have that come across to the Destination slide show exactly as it is? I also note that your footer sits in the Slide Master of your original source file and not in the slide/s itself thus why it hasn't copied over.

Slide 3 (the one copied from Source "Using Source Theme) shows the slide as per the source, including the Source files footer. Interestingly it has the bulleted list spaced correctly, which is another issue with this copying.

Thanks for showing the file. I initially thought you wanted to retain the original orange footer but have the objects formatted to destination. If I understand the requirements, you want to see the RED footer activated when you copy the source slide using destination format. I may have a solution.

In this case go to your Background Style and click on format background where there is a option picture/texture fill. Click on it and you can find the insert picture option. I think you can upload your desired background picture from here.

This is generally done by editing the slide master for the theme. When you do this, however, the effects are permanent, so your future presentations with this theme will have the new background images. Sounds like that's what you are looking for.

I updated the default theme for PowerPoint by saving a new Blank.potx file. The file works great, but the preview in PowerPoint > New menu looks like a document rather than what the slide deck actually looks like. How do I get this preview to look correct?

Instead of naming the file Blank.potx, call it Default Theme.potx and move it to the Document Themes subfolder of your Templates directory (C:\Users\YourActualUserName\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Templates\Document Themes). Then you should get an icon that shows a preview.

If you're still having problems, open File>Info>Properties>Advanced Properties and make sure that on the Summary tab of the dialog, there is a check mark beside Save preview picture.

The advanced file properties was exactly what I was looking for. I had seen that suggestion elsewhere on the internet and incorrectly assumed it was a file property set from explorer and not something within the PowerPoint application. Thanks for the quick reply!

Microsoft never released the beta super-theme tool and appears to have removed even the beta tool; I've searched for it a number of times and had no luck finding it. Incidentally, superthemes and variants are pretty much the same deal; you must create a supertheme in order to enable variants.

Can anyone help me create a custom powerpoint template that would correspond to the following slides? Slide 1 is a Cover or Title page, Slide 2 is a Commentary Page (No Charts), and Slide 3 is a mix of Charts and Commentary (Slides 2 and 3 are typically repeated with differing content multiple times within a presentation.)

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I've tried a bunch of different things (kind of throwing stuff against the wall - and I didn't save them when they didn't work.) I'll spend some time with these references - thanks again for the help!

I've changed the color and alignment of the title on the main slide and added a title slide. Hopefully you can use this as a starting point for futher customization. This is the code the results in the following slide

I want to use a PowerPoint template and bring into to Storyline for use as a Storyline template. My client has a lot of corporate PowerPoint templates and per corporate dicta, all e-learning must have some of the same look and feel.

Looked through all the old beta forum posts (since last October anyway) and could not find anything on this specific topic. I found a thread from where Jeanette demonstrates how to save a theme in Storyline- but I'm guessing that you already know this. Here is the link to the screencast just in case you or someone else reading this post might not know how.

The way that you are doing it sounds like the cleanest method - but have you just tried to import the .pptx as is (i.e. full of content), then delete the content once it's in Storyline, then save as a theme? Seems like it would save a few steps (as long as the file imports correctly that is!). Seems like it would be worth a try.

I was doing all the editing work first in PowerPoint to keep the import file as small and as efficient as possible. Was thinking, in general, that keeping an import simple always increases the chance of success.

A theme provides the framework for a slide presentation. Master slide layouts will give you a starting point for each of your slides and make sure that elements like your company logo and slide number placement are consistent throughout your presentation.

A template can also (and should) be saved with a theme already loaded. Every PowerPoint template includes a theme whether you create one for your business or not. All default PowerPoint templates start with the Microsoft Office Theme. Including your business theme will help to keep your look consistent and recognizable.

Use the default colors as a guideline of sorts. Make sure that colors 1 and 3 are dark, colors 2 and 4 are light, and the accent colors reflect the colors you want to assign to objects. The order is important and will affect the way PowerPoint applies colors.

If you are sending your presentation out as a PDF, or presenting on your own computer, you can be more flexible with more specific brand fonts. But keep in mind, if you are distributing your template throughout your company for employees to use, everyone will need access to any custom fonts contained in the file.

The master slides in your template are meant to give you guidance for where text and images go, what color the headings are, where page numbers are placed, etc. You will still need to put in some work to get each slide looking exactly the way you want. 152ee80cbc

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