Welcome back to the course. So far we have learned Object Editing, and now it is time to make our pages truly come alive with images.
In this module, we will focus completely on picture editing in InPage, from adding a photo to your page all the way to giving it the perfect size, angle, and finishing border.
I still remember the first wedding card I designed in InPage. I had the text ready, but my pictures looked stretched, crooked, and far too heavy on the page. Once I learned the simple picture tools you are about to see, my work changed overnight. So let me walk you through the same steps that helped me, in plain and easy language that anyone can follow.
Before you place any image, it helps to have your Urdu text ready first, because pictures and text always work best as a team. If you have already written your content somewhere in Unicode, you do not need to retype a single word. You can convert it in seconds with our Unicode to InPage converter and then paste the result straight into your page. With your text in place, you are ready to bring in your pictures and start designing.
To add a picture, you simply create a picture box on your page and import your image file into it. Once that image sits inside the box, all the editing tools become available to you.
When you select a picture in InPage, a set of picture tools appears for you to use. Think of this as your control panel for every image on the page. Everything you need to shape, fade, turn, and frame an image lives right here.
Here are the main tools you will use again and again:
My advice is to keep this bar visible while you work. The more you use these buttons, the faster and more confident you will become with each design.
Formatting is where most beginners struggle, but it is actually very simple once you understand it. Follow these steps:
From experience, always resize using the corners. Pulling the side handles is the number one reason photos end up looking stretched and unprofessional.
Opacity simply means how solid or how see-through your picture looks. A full image has high opacity, while a faded one has low opacity. This feature is wonderful for backgrounds. Here is how to use it:
I often place a low-opacity image behind my Urdu text. It adds a beautiful, gentle background without making the words hard to read, which is perfect for title pages and posters.
Rotating lets you tilt a picture to a creative angle, which is perfect for posters, titles, and decorative designs. The steps are quick:
A small tip from me: a gentle tilt of only a few degrees can make a plain design feel lively, while a full ninety-degree turn works great for side labels and spine text.
A border frames your whole page and gives your document a finished, professional look. InPage offers several border styles to match your design. To apply one:
For official documents I keep borders thin and plain, but for cards and posters I happily pick something more decorative. The right border can completely change the feel of your page.
In the next module, we’ll learn and go over the: File Menu in Inpage.