You may crop multiple pictures at once, but you must crop them to the same shape. (But in Word, this is difficult, because you can't multi-select pictures that have the default In Line with Text layout option.)

You can adjust the position of the picture within the frame by selecting the picture and dragging it where you want. For example, this can help you center the most important part of the picture within the shape you've applied to the picture.


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Quick Styles let you apply a style to your shape with one click. You'll find the styles in the Quick Style gallery. When you hover over a Quick Style thumbnail, you can see how the style affects your shape.

After adding a shape to a document, you can modify it by adding connector lines, changing the style, adding a mirror image, changing the color, and applying a variety of other effects, such as shadows, glow, and 3-D.

You can add shapes, such as boxes, circles, and arrows, to your workbooks and presentations. (Word for the web doesn't support shapes.) To add a shape, select Insert on the ribbon, select Shapes, and then choose a shape.

When a shape is selected in your document, a Shape tab appears on the toolbar ribbon. It has buttons for things you can do with the shape such as adding a fill color or outline, or choosing a predefined shape style.

I love @David Parker's solution, but if I needed to do something fairly quick - I would simply open up a custom stencil file, and copy some of the basic shapes I needed for my project. Then, I would go into the shape editor, add custom connection points, then drag them into my stencil file. That way, I have pre-modified stencils that I can just drag around.

Started yesterday, I could no longer resize or rotate an inserted shape or item. I tried uninstalling and re-installing. I even tried using SetupProd_OffScrub to uninstall Office365 to see if it could remove settings that were saved in the registry. I have the following specs on my laptop:

Lucky You. Once insert the shape into the document, it will not rotate or resize. When I open the same document on my Windows 7 laptop, I can do rotate and resize without any issue. I have done a complete wipe on my computer. I downloaded the office 365 app and it still doesn't work. I wonder if it is the app version.

(For my case this solution is not possible, because I am maintaining 1000+ pages textbook, full of images and graphic shapes. Its size is 370MB. It takes Word about 50 seconds to save its *.doc variant on my SSD disc. For the same document in the *.docx variant it takes 10 minutes, which makes any more serious editing impossible - too much time spend waiting for Word, to save the *.docx file).

To resolve this behavior, insert the shapes and connector in a new drawing canvas. When the shapes and connector are inserted in a new drawing canvas, the connector is connected to the shape. And, the connector remains connected to the shape when you move the shape.

To insert a new drawing canvas, on the Insert tab, click Shapes in the Illustrations group, and then click New Drawing Canvas. Then, insert the shapes and connector that you want.

Represents an object in the drawing layer, such as an AutoShape, freeform, OLE object, ActiveX control, or picture. The Shape object is a member of the Shapes collection, which includes all the shapes in the main story of a document or in all the headers and footers of a document.

There are three objects that represent shapes: the Shapes collection, which represents all the shapes on a document; the ShapeRange object, which represents a specified subset of the shapes on a document (for example, a ShapeRange object could represent shapes one and four on the document, or it could represent all the selected shapes on the document); and the Shape object, which represents a single shape on a document. If you want to work with several shapes at the same time or with shapes within the selection, use a ShapeRange collection.

Use Shapes (index), where index is the name or the index number, to return a single Shape object. The following example horizontally flips shape one on the active document.

Each shape is assigned a default name when it is created. For example, if you add three different shapes to a document, they might be named Rectangle 2, TextBox 3, and Oval 4. To give a shape a more meaningful name, set the Name property.

Use ShapeRange (index), where index is the name or the index number, to return a Shape object that represents a shape within a selection. The following example sets the fill for the first shape in the selection, assuming that the selection contains at least one shape.

To add a Shape object to the collection of shapes for the specified document and return a Shape object that represents the newly created shape, use one of the following methods of the Shapes collection: AddCallout, AddCurve, AddLabel, AddLine, AddOleControl, AddOleObject, AddPolyline, AddShape, AddTextbox, AddTextEffect, or BuildFreeForm. The following example adds a rectangle to the active document.

Use GroupItems (index), where index is the shape name or the index number within the group, to return a Shape object that represents a single shape in a grouped shape.

Use the Group or Regroup method to group a range of shapes and return a single Shape object that represents the newly formed group. After a group has been formed, you can work with the group the same way you work with any other shape.

Every Shape object is anchored to a range of text. A shape is anchored to the beginning of the first paragraph that contains the anchoring range. The shape will always remain on the same page as its anchor.

You can view the anchor itself by setting the ShowObjectAnchors property to True. The shape's Top and Left properties determine its vertical and horizontal positions. The shape's RelativeHorizontalPosition and RelativeVerticalPosition properties determine whether the position is measured from the anchoring paragraph, the column that contains the anchoring paragraph, the margin, or the edge of the page.

Use the SetShapesDefaultProperties method for a Shape object to set the formatting for the default shape for the document. New shapes inherit many of their attributes from the default shape.

Use the Type property to specify the type of shape: freeform, AutoShape, OLE object, callout, or linked picture, for example. Use the AutoShapeType property to specify the type of AutoShape: oval, rectangle, or balloon, for example.

The TextFrame property returns the TextFrame object, which contains all the properties and methods for attaching text to shapes and linking the text between text frames.

Shape objects are anchored to a range of text but are free-floating and can be positioned anywhere on the page. InlineShape objects are treated like characters and are positioned as characters within a line of text. Use the ConvertToInlineShape method and the ConvertToShape method to convert shapes from one type to the other. You can convert only pictures, OLE objects, and ActiveX controls to inline shapes.

You can add a variety of shapes to your document, including arrows, callouts, squares, stars, and flowchart shapes. Want to set your name and address apart from the rest of your resume? Use a line. Need to create a diagram showing a timeline or process? Use flowchart shapes. While you may not need shapes in every document you create, they can add visual appeal and clarity.

If one shape overlaps another, you may need to change the ordering so the correct shape appears in front. You can bring a shape to the front or send it to the back. If you have multiple images, you can use Bring to Front or Send to Back to fine tune the ordering. You can also move a shape in front of or behind text.

Word allows you to modify your shapes in a variety of ways so you can tailor them to your projects. You can change a shape into a different shape, format a shape's style and color, and add various effects.

How to group a picture and a shape/text box in Microsoft Word 2013? I have discovered that I can't group pictures as well. Does "Group" command concerned with grouping shapes only? Are there any workarounds to this problem?

It is a real shame that pictures and textboxes/shapes can't be grouped in more recent versions of word. I heard that if you add a textbox, click on properties, fill, and add the image as a fill picture of a textbox then one would be able to group with other textboxes, but I have not found this to be possible.

UNTIL I made sure that the textbox containing the image and the shapes and textboxes that I wanted to group it with had the same Text Wrapping setting (in front of text). Then I could group them, and change the text wrapping back to inline for the whole group. In earlier version of Word, the text wrapping was automatically unified to that of one or other grouped item but now this must be done manually in 2007. I hope that this works for 2013 too. 2351a5e196

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