Microsoft Word Tips and Tricks

February 17th, 2010

How do I change the default font?

To change the default character formatting:

  1. Choose Format, Font.
  2. Choose a font name in the Font box, change the size, or change formats.
  3. When you finish changing the default formatting, click the Default button.
  4. When Word displays a dialog box asking you to confirm that you want to change the default font for the current template, click Yes.

Word immediately makes changes the current document. If Word later asks you to confirm changes when you close the document, choose the Yes button again.

How do I change the Normal.dot template?

Many people don’t realize that you can open templates just like you open other documents.

  1. Choose File, Open and change the Files of type drop-down box to Templates (*.dot).
  2. When the template is open, choose Format, Style. Click a style and choose Modify. Be sure that Add to template is checked.
  3. Make any other changes to styles or the template.
  4. Save and close the file. When you save the template, any new documents using the Normal template will reflect the changes you made in the Normal.dot file.

In Word 6/95, if you want your older documents that use the Normal template to reflect the changes you made, you need to open the files and “reattach” your new Normal.dot by selecting File, Templates and clicking the Attach button. You need to make sure that the “Automatically Update Document Styles” box has an X in it. (The little X is the key.)

The process is similar in later versions of Word. Choose Tools, Templates and Add-Ins. Click Attach and choose the template. Then click Open. Again make suare you check the Automatically update document styles check box in the Templates and Add-Ins dialog box. Any styles in the document with the same names will be updated with the formatting changes you made to the template.

How do I make Word stop appending .doc to my filenames?

Former WordPerfect users often have a slew of files that they’ve organized by file extension (such as .ltr for letter). Unfortunately if you try and save MyFile.ltr, recent versions of Word insist on appending .doc so you end up with MyFile.ltr.doc, which looks stupid and is hard to read.

If you enclose your filename in double quotes, such as “MyFile.ltr” when you type the filename in the Save As box, you can name your file anything you want.

How do I create “reversed-out” text?

You can format the text by selecting Format, Borders and Shading. Click on the Shading tab and change the color to Solid 100%. If the font color is set to Auto, it will change to white. If not, go into Format, Font and change the text to white.

Note that this technique makes a black bar that runs across the entire width of the page. If that’s what you want, you’re done. If not, you could create a single row table with 3 columns. Format one cell as black and leave the others blank. Adjust the columns to force your text where you want it.

Add an address into any program

If you keep your addresses in the database, they can be used in any of the software components offered in Microsoft Office 2007. When you want to do address labels in Word, or send e-mails in Outlook, they can be accessed. I love that!


One of my favourite features in Microsoft Office Word 2007 is the Quick Access Toolbar. For example, to add the Translate feature to the Quick Access Toolbar, click on the Review Tab and then right-click the Translate button. Click on Add to Quick Access Toolbar. The Translate button now appears on the Quick Access Toolbar next to the Office button.

Add features to the Quick Access Toolbar


In Office 2007, you no longer have to hold down the Alt key to use shortcuts to access menus and their corresponding commands or submenus. It was awkward keeping my pinkie finger on the Alt key while pivoting on that same finger and hoping to hit the right keys at the same time. Now you just have to hold it down long enough for the letters to pop up next to the menu headings. This method of reaching the commands that you need is far more accurate and faster!

Alt key with just a tap of a finger


Before you share your document with other people, use the Document Inspector to check the document for hidden metadata, personal information or other hidden content. The Document Inspector can find and remove information such as comments, versions, tracked changes, ink annotations, document properties, document management server information, hidden text, custom XML data and information in headers and footers.

Before you share, use the Document Inspector

Have a checklist ready for camping trips. I have a different-coloured index card for each member of the family. The cards are pre-printed, so each person grabs his or her index card, and nothing is ever forgotten.

Create a camping checklist

With the Background Styles option in the Design tab of PowerPoint, you can choose a different background for every slide and completely customize it with a variety of shadings and colours. The gradient and textured backgrounds create eye-catching presentations.

Customize your slides


A very handy tool for helping find an Excel 2003 command or function in Excel 2007 is the Excel Ribbon mapping workbook. It makes the transition much easier. To find the location of menu and toolbar commands in Excel 2007, open the Excel Ribbon mapping workbook. Instructions on the first tab of the workbook provide tips for customizing, finding and printing data.

Easily find data with the Excel Ribbon


While I was tooling around in Word 2007, I discovered the References tab. This tab handles almost any type of citation you may be required to use in your writing. Divided into six sections — Table of Contents, Footnotes, Citations & Bibliography, Captions, Index and Table of Authorities — everything is organized in an efficient and self-explanatory fashion.

Easily manage your references and footnotes


My best summer survival tip is to use the Internet to check out which beaches have lifeguards — on what days and during what hours — so you can make safer choices about where to swim with your family.

Find a safe beach for your family


I use the Internet to find disabled-friendly accommodations and parks with good accessibility. It used to take me months to plan a trip, but now I can plan a trip in less than a week!

Find disabled-friendly locations


When making plans with the kids to visit a museum, fun park or wave park for the day, check out the venue’s web site for money-saving coupons, special events and loads of additional information.

Find money-saving coupons online


When I open a file and want to use Home Office/Student, I click “Always Open this type of file with this program.” I don’t have to search through useless programs to get to the file I want.

Go directly to a file

I do a lot of fishing, wilderness camping and hiking all over Nova Scotia during the summer. Before I go anywhere, I plan my trip on the computer and save my plans in a file marked GONE FISHING. If anyone wants to find me, that’s where I’ll be.Go fishing!


If you constantly work in two languages in Word, enable Review > Set Language and check Detect Language automatically. The languages’ dictionaries must be loaded to use this feature.

Go global with a variety of dictionaries

When typing a document, you can even have paragraphs switch languages, and the dictionaries will check spelling for each paragraph separately. The languages must be selected at the installation stage of Office.


Excel 2007 has an increased spreadsheet row and column capacity of 1 million rows by 16,000 columns. You can import and work with massive amounts of data. In Word 2007, you can remove unwanted information from your documents. The new Document Inspector can remove comments, tracked changes or other unwanted information. In Outlook 2007, I used to press the Send button and then realize something was wrong, but it was too late to stop the e-mail from going out. I love that you can now defer the delivery of a message or all messages by at least one minute.

Improve with Excel, Word and Outlook


I discovered that inserting tables in Microsoft Word 2007 has changed slightly from [inserting tables in] the previous version of Office. But it’s really a piece of cake with the new Ribbon. Once you have created a table, add a splash of colour. Click on the table you have just created and find the new set of tabs in the Ribbon. Click on the Table Styles selector and click on your favourite color scheme. The result is a very attractive, very simple table.

Insert tables with the new Ribbon feature


When you are typing and don’t want the ruler on all the time, place your cursor on the grey line between the document and settings above. The ruler will come on temporarily so you can see it and adjust it if necessary.

Keep in line with the ruler — when you want it


Office OneNote is very handy for taking quick notes of something I want to use or check out later.

Keep it all in notes


A really handy feature I found in Word 2007 is the Change Case button. It is located below the Font Size drop-down in the Font section of the Ribbon. To use it, highlight/select the sentence or word you wish to change, and then click on the case option you want. This is just GREAT for emphasizing titles, headings and abstracts.

Make it STAND OUT. Change the Case.


Equations can be put into your Word document with ease. Click Insert > Equation and you’re off and running; no more looking for the program to import it. You can also set up automatic numbering or bullets. I was amazed by this feature and would recommend Office 2007 over Office 2003 any day. This is a great upgrade, especially for students. It saves time and frustration when trying to complete math assignments.

Make math simple — add equations to your Word doc


I use a lot of tables in my business and have always liked using the grid system in Word. I was surprised to find that now the grid is shown on the page as you select it. It’s really easy to see exactly what you are going to get when you make a table. It’s also great that you can select colours for the table from the design tab that pops up — nice and easy!

Make stunning tables with the grid


Creating a theme in Microsoft Office PowerPoint makes things a whole lot easier when you create a presentation. Where I work, we use particular colours and fonts in our presentations, so by setting the theme a certain way, each time we go in to create a new presentation, we can easily pick the theme and get started with all the right colours and fonts.

Make your presentations stand out with a theme


There is plenty to do in our part of Ontario. I click on the activities file on my computer, and we choose from different things to do for the day. We write the ideas on paper and put them in a hat. Each member has a chance to choose the day’s tour.

Pick your summer activities from a hat


The children are planting their own small gardens this year, and each child looked up veggies on the web. Then we purchased the plants, and the children researched how to plant them and care for them as well as other gardening tips.

Plan your garden online


Before going away, reduce the stress and make things easier by taking along pre-made postcard labels for each person you want to send one to. It makes it easier to choose the cards, too.

Prepare postcards ahead of time


Add commonly used commands to the Quick Access Toolbar on the top left corner in Office 2007. Simply right-click on it and go into customize the toolbar. Sometimes adding the print command will speed up productivity.

Print faster with a customized toolbar


As first-time parents, we have found the Internet invaluable for learning about infant safety in the summer: preventing burns, treating bug bites and practising pool safety.

Protect your newborn baby


This new feature is one of my favourites. With older versions of Word, not everybody knew all the shortcuts or where to find them. If you press the Alt key in Microsoft Word 2007, it will display all commands on the Quick Access Toolbar. No more trying to figure it out.

Quick Access to shortcuts


I save tons of time with the themes in Office. Changing the theme of a document not only changes the background colour but also changes the colours, styles and fonts of the diagrams, tables, charts, shapes and text. You can get great looking results fast and easy.

Save time with themes


I use the Internet to search for new camping sites, bike trails, outdoor concerts and new activities to keep me outdoors in the summer. I also sign up for text messaging on my mobile to receive alerts.

Search for summer activities


To get your word processing done in no time, you can customize the Quick Access Toolbar. All commands are listed in alphabetical order in More Commands in the Quick Access Toolbar. By adding the more frequently used commands to this toolbar, you can finish your job faster by clicking on the icons in the toolbar instead of navigating around the menus.

Stop searching for menus

Use a cool font!

When you go to the Font dialogue box and click on a particular font type, the example shows up in the text and gives you a better look at how the font will appear if selected.


It’s easy to make labels or envelopes in Word. Go to Tools > Letters & Mailings > Envelopes and Labels, and you can be sure that your outgoing mail will look professional.

Use Word to make professional labels


One feature I’ve found really useful is the zoom slider at the bottom right corner of Word and other Office 2007 applications. Now, zooming out to see how the text looks on paper before printing and zooming in to enlarge font is a breeze compared to all the menu navigation in older word-processing software. For more precision, you can also click on the buttons beside the slider: Print Layout, Full Screen Reading, Web Layout, Outline and Draft.

Download Free Windows 7 IbarraReal Font

February 10th, 2010

Microsoft is providing users of its operating system, including of the latest version of the platform Windows 7, with a free font, in addition to the items shipping by default with the operating system. In this regard, end users running Windows 7, but also Windows Vista and Windows XP can grab the Ibero-American cultural font IbarraReal from the Microsoft Download Center free of charge. The Redmond company has chosen the IbarraReal font for its intimate connection with the Spanish culture, namely to Don Quixote.

“IbarraReal is a public-domain font of Ibero-American character, created in 2005 as a revival of the types cast by Jerónimo Gil for the Royal Spanish Academy’s edition of Don Quixote, printed in Madrid by Joaquín Ibarra in 1780. Its elegant design mixes tradition and modernity and is a genuine badge of Spanish culture,” Microsoft stated.

Originally designed by Francisco Javier de Santiago Palomares, the IbarraReal typeface was chosen by Joaquín Ibarra for his edition of Don Quixote published in 1780, after being commissioned by the Royal Spanish Academy. The Redmond company has essentially managed to bring back to life the font which was at the heart of the 1780 edition of the Don Quixote classic story. As of February 2010, Microsoft has made the font available for free to all users of Windows.

“There are several ways to install fonts on Windows 7. The easiest way to install a font is to double-click on a font file to open the font preview and select ‘Install’. You can also right-click on a font file, and then select ‘Install’. Another option is to install fonts with the Fonts Control Panel. Follow these steps to open the Fonts Control Panel. Select ‘Control Panel’ from the ‘Start’ menu, then select the ‘Appearance and Personalization’ category. Select ‘Fonts’. Drag a font file and drop it into the Fonts Control Panel,” Microsoft revealed.

There are no less than four downloads in OTF format: IbarraReal-Bold, IbarraReal-BoldItalic, IbarraReal-Italic and IbarraReal-Regular.

Microsoft typography

February 10th, 2010

Information on Other Fonts

Fonts supplied with non-Microsoft products

Fonts that are included in Windows 7

February 10th, 2010

Windows 7 ships with 235 fonts, versus 191 in Vista and 133 in Windows XP. The list of typefaces that ship with Windows 7 can be found here. Microsoft publish them on this page and list all the new fonts here.

To view a list of all the fonts on your system, go to the Fonts control panel or simply type ‘font’ at the Start menu. This will take you into the same control panel.

Font types that are supported by Windows7

February 10th, 2010

Found a good list  that Windows 7 supports the same font types as Vista does.

  • Type 1 (as with other versions of Windows, you need .PFM and .PFB files)
  • Multiple Master
  • TrueType (.TTF/.TTC/.OTF)
  • OpenType (using CFF outlines, .OTF)
  • bitmap fonts (.FON)
  • Old vector font format fonts (typically .FON as well).
  • A new composite font file format that is used to describe international font linking and fallback logic (.CompositeFont).

Microsoft Word Fonts How to Find, Download, Add and Use New Fonts

January 29th, 2010

Using unique fonts in your documents can be just the extra touch you need to guarantee your memos stand out, your reports look polished, and your flyer conveys your message. While Microsoft Word comes with a number of standard fonts, such as Arial, Courier New, and Times New Roman, you can install new fonts on your computer at any time–and then use those fonts to spice up your Word documents. There are a huge variety of fonts available; whether you’re looking for cool fonts, calligraphy fonts, or other font types, there’s a font out there for you.

The Web is an outstanding resource for finding free fonts in a huge range of styles (see links related to this article for a few great fonts). You also can purchase font libraries on CD or online. Windows supports several different types of fonts including TrueType fonts (TTF, .ttf), OpenType fonts (OTF, .otf), and Type 1 fonts (PFM, .pfm). If you are downloading fonts or are purchasing a font CD, be sure that they are one of these types of fonts, otherwise the fonts may not be recognized by Windows. In my opinion, if you want an excellent deal, check out Ultimate Font Download – you get over 6,500 fonts.

When you download a font from a Web site, you will usually download a .zip file, which is a compressed file format that makes the download smaller. You will need to unzip the .zip file before you can add those fonts to your computer. To unzip a file, locate the file using Windows Explorer, right-click the file name, and then select Extract All in the shortcut menu.

Sanford is a clean serifed typeface. You can use it in just about any document: it will stand out as unique because of the subtle differences from the standard Microsoft Word fonts, like Times New Roman. It’s easy to read and can be used in practically any kind of document.

Read more: http://www.brighthub.com/multimedia/publishing/articles/5753.aspx#ixzz0e1fG0tvg

If you want a slightly old-fashioned font that works well with Microsoft Word, consider Goudy Bookletter 1911. This font can be used on any text, but it’s especially ideal if you’re working on a document that you to add an air of vintage typesetting.

When it comes to sans serif fonts, a lot of the options that come with Microsoft Word can look pretty much the same. But Blue Highway offers a choice with a professional appearance, that still manages to stand out

It’s important to have a fixed-width font or two at your disposal if you publishes a lot of documents. Selectric is a great example of a fixed-width font: it has serifs, but they don’t change the fact that every letter is exactly the same width. Fixed-width fonts are commonly used to separate certain types of information from the rest of a document: if you’re showing the code used to create a program or the data set used to create statistics, setting it in a fixed-width font is an easy way to separate it from the rest of your document.

Most Free Windows Fonts are Compatible with Microsoft Word!

September 30th, 2009

That’s right. Pick almost ANY font, free or otherwise, listed to work with Windows and you can be 99.99% sure that it will work with Microsoft Word Fonts list!

There’s tens of thousands of fonts out there that you can choose from (and we’ll surely bring you the best!) and it’s so easy to experiment (just download a font, install it by clicking on the file and you’re done) that it can be a lot of fun to surf around, have a look and find the one you actually like or need most!

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Which Font to Choose? Quick Guide into Microsoft Word Fonts

September 25th, 2009

Are you looking for a cool font that you can write your new website in or apply to your birthday invitations? Well, here’s a quick guide on which font to use as there are millions out there!

First you should consider the occasion – who will read your text? If it’s business people then you might want to choose a conservative kind of typeface, if it’s your friends reading your birthday invitation then a more funny kind of font will be appropriate. Whichever the case, here’s the main guideline ………….:

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New Fonts in Office 2010

September 16th, 2009

Most of you probably know that Microsoft Office 2010 is due out pretty soon.
It’s exciting to see what kind of new fonts does this brand new version of Word offer, especially as Word 2007 surprised us with many cool fonts such as their default Calibri and many more.

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