Want black box 2x3" with white lettering

  • Thread starter Thread starter Ronda
  • Start date Start date
That's fairly easy. Follow these steps:

From the Insert ribbon, select Text Box | Draw Text Box.
Draw the Text Box approximately where you want it.
Right-click on the edge of the Text Box and select More Layout Options.
Select the Size tab and enter the size you want ( 2" x 3") and click OK
Type in your text and centre as required.
Format the Text as White.
Once again, right-click on the edge of the Text Box and now select Format Shape.
Select Fill (if not already selected), choose Solid Fill and select the colour (let's say Black).
Click OK.

You should now have a text box filled in black with white text.
 
You can equally well use a table cell (though in this case you use Shading
instead of Fill). And if you just want white text on a black background, you
don't actually have to change the font color: if it's set to Automatic, it
will automatically become white if you apply black shading or fill.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org

That's fairly easy. Follow these steps:

From the Insert ribbon, select Text Box | Draw Text Box.
Draw the Text Box approximately where you want it.
Right-click on the edge of the Text Box and select More Layout Options.
Select the Size tab and enter the size you want ( 2" x 3") and click OK
Type in your text and centre as required.
Format the Text as White.
Once again, right-click on the edge of the Text Box and now select Format
Shape.
Select Fill (if not already selected), choose Solid Fill and select the
colour (let's say Black).
Click OK.

You should now have a text box filled in black with white text.
 
That's true about 'automatic font colour'. But I have found many printer drivers that get confused by automatically reversed colours and ignore the reversed colour, resulting in this example as black text over a black background (invisible text). Actually changing the setting to the real reversed colour usually resolves the printing issue.

Terry
You can equally well use a table cell (though in this case you use Shading
instead of Fill). And if you just want white text on a black background, you
don't actually have to change the font color: if it's set to Automatic, it
will automatically become white if you apply black shading or fill.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org

That's fairly easy. Follow these steps:

From the Insert ribbon, select Text Box | Draw Text Box.
Draw the Text Box approximately where you want it.
Right-click on the edge of the Text Box and select More Layout Options.
Select the Size tab and enter the size you want ( 2" x 3") and click OK
Type in your text and centre as required.
Format the Text as White.
Once again, right-click on the edge of the Text Box and now select Format
Shape.
Select Fill (if not already selected), choose Solid Fill and select the
colour (let's say Black).
Click OK.

You should now have a text box filled in black with white text.
 
Good point. And of course, if you want to override Word's choice, you have
to set font color explicitly. I was just doing this today, as Word doesn't
reverse the type for the colors it (in Word 2003) calls Red, Green, and
Blue, and yet white does show up better than black. Another point that
should be made is that, for reversed text, a sans serif font is preferable
to serif, and it helps to make it Bold as well.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org

That's true about 'automatic font colour'. But I have found many printer
drivers that get confused by automatically reversed colours and ignore the
reversed colour, resulting in this example as black text over a black
background (invisible text). Actually changing the setting to the real
reversed colour usually resolves the printing issue.

Terry
You can equally well use a table cell (though in this case you use Shading
instead of Fill). And if you just want white text on a black background,
you
don't actually have to change the font color: if it's set to Automatic, it
will automatically become white if you apply black shading or fill.

--
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
http://word.mvps.org

That's fairly easy. Follow these steps:

From the Insert ribbon, select Text Box | Draw Text Box.
Draw the Text Box approximately where you want it.
Right-click on the edge of the Text Box and select More Layout Options.
Select the Size tab and enter the size you want ( 2" x 3") and click OK
Type in your text and centre as required.
Format the Text as White.
Once again, right-click on the edge of the Text Box and now select Format
Shape.
Select Fill (if not already selected), choose Solid Fill and select the
colour (let's say Black).
Click OK.

You should now have a text box filled in black with white text.
 
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