Once upon a time, there was a dance team that wanted a flyer. A nice, A4, tri-fold flyer. Dr Fiona heroically tackled it. Then she said sod this, Word is a fair bugger, I cannot get the columns to line up nicely on both sides of the paper.
Haha, I thought, I am so very clever, I will use a downloadable tri-fold flyer template from Office Online. And lo, I did, and it was also a fair bugger because it is completely un-customisable. You want three folds? Well, some of it will be bright orange. No other colour is available. Just bright orange.
After an awful lot of fiddling about, I finally had something I was at least not-unhappy with. And then I printed out a trial run, and it turns out the US-centric world of Office Online makes its tri-fold flyer templates for Letter sized paper. Not A4. Which I had not checked. I am, in fact, not so very clever after all. I imagine the template can be tweaked, but then it's back to the original problem of getting columns to line up manually. I haven't even successfully worked out how to get three evenly-spaced columns yet :( I've never liked Word.
Does anyone have... a tri-fold A4 template, a better knowledge of Word than I have, a burning desire to show off their graphic-design skills, or a large bottle of gin[*]?
Any assistance greatly appreciated.
Edit Or, of course, does anyone have a source of Letter paper, a colour/duplex printer that will handle it, and a generic willingness to assist in exchange for cake? (I have never owned a printer, I have no idea if they mostly do Letter...)
[*] Not strictly relevant, but I might stop caring about the flyer...
Haha, I thought, I am so very clever, I will use a downloadable tri-fold flyer template from Office Online. And lo, I did, and it was also a fair bugger because it is completely un-customisable. You want three folds? Well, some of it will be bright orange. No other colour is available. Just bright orange.
After an awful lot of fiddling about, I finally had something I was at least not-unhappy with. And then I printed out a trial run, and it turns out the US-centric world of Office Online makes its tri-fold flyer templates for Letter sized paper. Not A4. Which I had not checked. I am, in fact, not so very clever after all. I imagine the template can be tweaked, but then it's back to the original problem of getting columns to line up manually. I haven't even successfully worked out how to get three evenly-spaced columns yet :( I've never liked Word.
Does anyone have... a tri-fold A4 template, a better knowledge of Word than I have, a burning desire to show off their graphic-design skills, or a large bottle of gin[*]?
Any assistance greatly appreciated.
Edit Or, of course, does anyone have a source of Letter paper, a colour/duplex printer that will handle it, and a generic willingness to assist in exchange for cake? (I have never owned a printer, I have no idea if they mostly do Letter...)
[*] Not strictly relevant, but I might stop caring about the flyer...
no subject
Date: 2012-06-12 03:44 pm (UTC)Thank you for the suggestion, but I don't seem to have done a good job of following it. How did you get to the templates? I've tried two different routes, each of which seems to show me different selections...
no subject
Date: 2012-06-12 03:53 pm (UTC)-click on the Windows-squares pictogram in the round button at the top left that brings up the New, Open, ... options.
-click on New. Window called "New Document" pops up.
-Under Templates on the left it reads like this:
Blank and recent
Installed Templates
My templates...
New from existing...
Microsoft Office Online
Featured
Access databases
Agendas
Books
Brochures and booklets
...
-Click on Brochures and booklets and in the middle pops up three categories: Brochures, Catalogs, Programs. Click on Brochures.
-Grid of pictures of leaflets pops up, click on that one, click on Download button on bottom right.
-Template opens as a new document in Word. It has [compatibility mode] in the bar at the top and I've never figured out what this means.
no subject
Date: 2012-06-12 04:01 pm (UTC)I think the [compatibility mode] thing is a reference to it being a .doc document. Word 2007 went all .docx, but maintained support for .doc to keep compatibility with older versions of Word. So I think it's just telling that it's doing that, and that older versions of Word will be able to open the resulting document.