![]() ![]() If you click on the text box, even around the border, it will open up the text styles/editing box….which is not what you want. Now, deleting text boxes can be finicky in this program. ![]() Once that text box is deleted, I have more control about how and where I want my text to flow. Usually, my first step is to delete the text box on the right page (unless I know I want two full pages of text). The text is initially placed as two large photo boxes on the page. So let me walk through how to incorporate a larger piece of text into your photo book. This allows you to consistently edit the features of your text at once yet customize how much of the text you want to appear on a particular page. Instead, if you want to edit the text, you’re editing one text file – even though it appears in several boxes and pages, throughout your book. And this isn’t accomplished by copying/pasting different sentences into each box. It means that there is one text that can be sub-divided into various text boxes throughout your entire photo book. ![]() ![]() While it can definitely be finicky, BookWright does have an autoflow text feature. Recently, a reader reached out to me asking how to accomplish this using BookWright. Some people want to incorporate longer pieces of text – such as long-form journal entries – combined with photos into a photo book. Usually, if I’m going to add text to my photo book, it’s going to be as a title on the page or a caption to a photo. ![]()
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