How to make a newspaper layout in microsoft word 2010




















The heading and title of the document. In the main body of the article, there are 2 — 3 paragraphs. The conclusion of the article the opinion, recommendation, anticipation, or appeal is the last paragraph. The first tip is to design minimalistally. The second tip is to have a good color scheme.

The third tip is to use a flat look. The fourth tip is to use grids or geometric patterns. The fifth tip is to choose a font that is easy-on-the-eye.

The sixth tip is to stay consistent with your font size. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Hi, I have word professional installed in my PC. Thank you :.

I have the same question Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit. Rohn MVP. Sounds like there is a mismatch. If everything looks good in Word, then your problem is with the Printer. How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. This site in other languages x. It doesn't need to be precise, nor mirror any particular newspaper's layout exactly unless you want it to -- but it should be detailed enough to give you a general idea of where you'll be placing your text and, if your paper includes any, your images.

Launch Microsoft Word and create a new, blank document. Draw text boxes on your document to recreate the layout you sketched out on paper.

Select all the text boxes, click "Shape Outline," and then select "No Outline" to remove their borders. If your layout includes any images, insert and position them as you normally would. Type or paste your paper's text into the layout. To connect the text boxes serving as your newspaper's columns, click inside the first text box, click "Create Link," and then click the second text box.

Repeat this process with the remaining text boxes to ensure the text of each article flows correctly between them.



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