Cd Cover Word 2003 Templates
- Cdcovers.cc / World's Largest CD Covers and.
- Free download dvd cover template for word 2003 Files at Software Informer. Easy CD & DVD Cover Creator is fun to use.
- How to Make a CD Cover on Word 1.
- Maak een CD Cover behulp van Word 2003. Open Microsoft Word 1.
- Ein stylisches CD-Cover l
- Create Your Own CD and DVD Labels using Free MS Word Templates. Open the file and you’ll see the template is ready to use in Word.
CD DVD Full Face Label. The best way to use these Word doc templates is to save the template to your computer.
Microsoft Word 2. Creative Label Concepts. Create your own template using Microsoft Word (2.
Word Template Bold report Word FREE Word Template. Word Template Resume cover letter (chronological) Word FREE Word. CD/DVD Slim Line Jewel Case. Great for creating custom and personalized CD covers or DVD jewel case inserts. Template only (works with PC and. After you download a CD case insert template, you can edit and print it. If you want to download a Microsoft Word jewel case template.
Open a new document, choose tools, letters and mailings, labels and envelopes. Under the label tab, go to the bottom right corner and click on the current label selected to change it. Along the bottom, choose . If you do not see gray gridlines, choose the TABLE tab and then click on SHOW GRIDLINES. Even if you are designing an oval or a round label, Microsoft Word will only show you a gray rectangle as your template marking.
Design your label within the gray area set for each label. Be sure to allow for rounding if your label is oval or round. The gray lines are template markings only and will not print. Once you have one label set, you can copy and paste into the remaining label cells. NOTE: We suggest using the Microsoft DRAWING TOOLBAR to design your labels.
This toolbar will allow you to make text boxes, curved text, place an image or logo, draw shapes, etc. If you are not familiar with the drawing toolbar, you can do a google or yahoo search on “how to use the drawing toolbar in Microsoft Word” and you should get plenty of tips. When using a text box, you can right click and then click on properties – you can turn the border off and the fill off – this way there is no box around the object and the backgroundof the textbox is transparent – therefore not interfering with the design of you label.
When you get one text box / label cell aligned just right, you can select the contents of the cell by running your cursor over the left side of the cell until you see a black arrow, when you see the black arrow, hit CTRL + C. Then move to the label cell where you want to paste it.
Click your cursor in the box and hit CRTL +V to paste. It should pasteright in the cell where you need it to. You can also design your label by typing directly in the label cell (common if it’s a simple text label). BEFORE YOU PRINT ON YOUR LABEL SHEETS, print on white paper – hold the paper up to your label sheet against a bright light and see how it is aligning.
Make proper adjustments and try again. PLEASE NOTE: Creating templates in Microsoft Word for labels that have a clean size, marginor gutter, such as the labels that have measurements ending in 1.
However, some labels are more detailed, having gutters ormargins that end in numbers such as . When this happens, Microsoft Word rounds the gutter to . This fraction of an inch may not seem like much, but it can throw your label template off by the time you get to the last half of the page.
It can also affect your labels from left to right – lining up on the left and being slightly off by the time they get to the right. You will see your cursor shrink. You will see a small adjust upward.
Go to your font size box and manually enter a 2 or 4. You will see a slight adjustment downward. You can also use this to move your text slightly to the right. Place your cursor in front of what you want to move over, manually change your font size to 2 or 4 and hit the space bar.
You will see a slight adjustment to the right. You’ve designed your label using text boxes and elements – and you need to adjust one cell, one row, one column or all of the labels up, down, right or left.
Each element can be moved individually or you can group all elements of the label together and moved them at one time.- To group elements together, select the elements you’d like to group, then right click while they are all selected and choose GROUPING, GROUP. Using your CRTL and arrow keys, nudge the element or group of elements up, down, right or left as needed for better alignment.
You’ve designed your label using text boxes and elements but you can’t seem to move anything around as needed for alignment purposes. Make sure that each element is set to layout IN FRONT OF TEXT.- To do this, right click on the element, got to FORMAT and then click on the LAYOUT tab, choose IN FRONT ON TEXT (or BEHIND TEXT if necessary for design purposes). You are working with very small labels and notice a bit of a page creep from top to bottom, the labels on the top half line up fine, but tend to be unaligned by the last half of the page. Then send your label sheet through your printer, printing on only the top half. Turn the label sheet around and send it back through to print on the other half of the label sheet. You are trying to nudge elements up, down, right or left and when you do, you elements jump half way out of the cell.
I do not completely understand why this happens, but have found a way to deal with it. If you try to nudge an element and it jumps, simply hit undo (to move it back to where you started) and then right click on the element and choose FORMAT, then LAYOUT, then ADVANCED – at this point you can change the number for absolute positioning.
Make very small changes at a time until you get the desired result.