B
Bill Foley
Albeit, Word is not really a tool for creating graphic images, but:
Open your document with the image fully visible in the screen. You can try
one of the following two ways to capture the object:
1. If it is grouped together, you might be able to click the object, press
CTRL-C to copy it, then paste it into a program like Microsoft Photo Editor
and save it as a JPG (see below for details).
2. If #1 doesn't work, press ALT+PRINTSCREEN to capture the entire window,
open Microsoft Photo Editor, click "Edit", "Paste as new image". Select the
"Selection" tool (icon of a rectangle). Drag a selection around just the
part you want in your image. Press CTRL+C to copy it. Click "Edit", "Paste
as new image". Save it as a JPG.
Hope this helps!
Open your document with the image fully visible in the screen. You can try
one of the following two ways to capture the object:
1. If it is grouped together, you might be able to click the object, press
CTRL-C to copy it, then paste it into a program like Microsoft Photo Editor
and save it as a JPG (see below for details).
2. If #1 doesn't work, press ALT+PRINTSCREEN to capture the entire window,
open Microsoft Photo Editor, click "Edit", "Paste as new image". Select the
"Selection" tool (icon of a rectangle). Drag a selection around just the
part you want in your image. Press CTRL+C to copy it. Click "Edit", "Paste
as new image". Save it as a JPG.
Hope this helps!