Screenshot of the right click options in PowerPoint
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 9:01 am
Place your first image on the slide. Use Insert –> Image to select an image from your computer, a stock image or other online images. Need help finding high quality images? You can find a range of great recommendations here.
Now you have your image, let’s get it in the right place. Select the image, navigate to Picture Format on the ribbon, and select Crop. You can use the black crop handles to make sure it fits perfectly on the slide.
Screenshot of a PowerPoint slide with an image being cropped.
Step 2
Next up, duplicate image and line it up to phone numbers in afghanistan the right of the original, off the edge of the slide. To duplicate the image, select it, hold down CTRL and Shift on your keyboard, and drag the image across to the right of your slide. Holding CTRL duplicates, and Shift locks the dragged object so you can only move it either horizontally or vertically, ensuring things are kept neatly in line
Screenshot of PowerPoint with duplicate images lined up next top each other.
It’s important that this duplicate lines up perfectly with the original. Luckily, PowerPoint makes this easy with its Smart Guides feature. (You can double check Smart Guides is enabled by right clicking outside of your slide area, hovering over Guides, and checking Smart Guides is ticked).
PowerPoint’s Smart Guides feature will indicate that the two images are perfectly aligned with a red dotted line.
Step 3
Repeat the previous step as many times as you need for the number of images you want to loop. For a PowerPoint motion path to loop seamlessly, the first and last images need to remain exactly the same, so if you want a carousel of 3 images, you need a total of 4.
Now you have your image, let’s get it in the right place. Select the image, navigate to Picture Format on the ribbon, and select Crop. You can use the black crop handles to make sure it fits perfectly on the slide.
Screenshot of a PowerPoint slide with an image being cropped.
Step 2
Next up, duplicate image and line it up to phone numbers in afghanistan the right of the original, off the edge of the slide. To duplicate the image, select it, hold down CTRL and Shift on your keyboard, and drag the image across to the right of your slide. Holding CTRL duplicates, and Shift locks the dragged object so you can only move it either horizontally or vertically, ensuring things are kept neatly in line
Screenshot of PowerPoint with duplicate images lined up next top each other.
It’s important that this duplicate lines up perfectly with the original. Luckily, PowerPoint makes this easy with its Smart Guides feature. (You can double check Smart Guides is enabled by right clicking outside of your slide area, hovering over Guides, and checking Smart Guides is ticked).
PowerPoint’s Smart Guides feature will indicate that the two images are perfectly aligned with a red dotted line.
Step 3
Repeat the previous step as many times as you need for the number of images you want to loop. For a PowerPoint motion path to loop seamlessly, the first and last images need to remain exactly the same, so if you want a carousel of 3 images, you need a total of 4.