Word For Mac Negative Image
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Microsoft Word 2010 introduced Artistic Effects to add different effects to your photos and images. One of these effects is the inverted colour effect, which inverts colours and makes the image look like its photo negative.
One of the hidden features of the Adjust Colors panel in Leopard's Preview.app is the ability to invert colors of an image. By default, the Black Level slider is at the left, the White Level slider is at the right-hand side. To invert colors, simply 'flip' both sliders over to the other side respectively. The effect actually takes place as soon as one of the sliders crosses the position of the other one. Like that you can actually fine-tune the inversion and contrast, creating plenty of interesting effects. Interestingly, all other sliders are unaffected by the actual color inversion and they will alter the image as expected, and not inverted. I admit that I didn't play with it that much, as I only found out by accident.
For precise editing I'm using Photoshop anyway, but Preview.app is often sufficient for some 'quick'n'dirty' stuff. And it's possible that it's not a feature, but a bug. With Apple, you'll never know.:D (As a side note, there IS a nasty bug with the Adjust Colors panel: if you adjust colors and then you e.g. Change the size/resolution of the image, the adjust setting will be applied AGAIN.
You will have to click the Revert button to get the expected result of your editing.) [ ].
Try opening your.docx files on the Mac in the latest versions of and, which are both free. They are forks of the old program OpenOffice.org which you may be familiar with. They are huge programs that run rather slowly, but they may get the job done. They can also handle.xlsx and.pptx and many other office document formats.
Ultimately, though, you need to investigate what it is about these particular documents that someone is sending you, and the graphics embedded in them, that is causing this peculiar behavior. In Word there are all sorts of ways to insert images into a file. In Windows you can create a 'link' to the original creating software. This means that if you double click on the image then it opens the app which created the image. The important thing is that this means that you have actually added something more than just the image to the word file and if you transfer the file to Mac, the image will not be displayed as the 'linked' app doesn't exist. Try double clicking the images in Windows and seeing if they are linked.
If so, that is your problem. You must then find a way of inserting the images without linking. This page seems to explain how you can achieve this.