You’ll be able to adjust it later but start with that. Now, drag the bottom-center handle of the text box down, almost to the bottom of the circle. You don’t see much of a difference at first. On the Shape Format tab, choose Text Effects, then Transform, then the Arch option, as you see here. You’ll see equidistant guides when they are. Try to get the 2 text boxes the same distance from the circle. (Pressing Shift makes sure that the copy moves perfectly vertically.) Replace the text with your bottom text. You should see alignment guides when the text box is perfectly centered over the center of the circle.ĭuplicate the text box, press and hold Shift, and drag the copy to the bottom of the circle. Center the text box itself over the circle by dragging on its boundary. With the text box selected, on the Home tab, in the Paragraph section, click the Center icon to center the text in the text box. Don’t worry about the text size, font, or color right now. You don’t need to make the text all caps, but I decided to. On the Home tab in the Drawing section, click the Text Box item and drag on the slide above the circle. It already looks good but we’re going to add some text. Under the Fill section, choose Picture or Texture Fill and in the Picture Source section, choose Clipboard.Make sure the Fill & Line icon in the Format Shape pane is selected. Right-click the circle and choose Format Shape.To fill the circle with the image, follow these steps: A thinner weight will look more delicate. I chose a dark green.Ĭhoose Shape Outline again, then Weight, and choose a thicker weight. With the circle selected, click the Shape Format tab and choose Shape Fill and pick the white color.Ĭhoose Shape Outline and choose a color for the outline. The size isn’t so important now because you can resize the logo later but make it big enough to work with easily. On the slide, press the Shift key and drag on the slide to make a perfect circle. On the Home tab, in the Drawing group, click the Oval shape. If the image is big, drag it from one of the corners to make it smaller and move it to one side of the slide. I used a circle as the boundary for my image, but you could use a rounded rectangle (square) or a square. In this case, the center of the image was fine.Ĭlick outside the image to finish the crop. If necessary, drag the image inside the crop marks so that you get the part of the image you want. Select it, click the Picture Format tab, and then click the Crop down arrow – not the Crop button itself but the arrow below the button.Ĭhoose Aspect Ratio, 1:1. Right-click just off the first slide and choose Layout, Blank to get rid of the placeholders.Ĭhoose Insert, Pictures and navigate to the image you downloaded to insert it. Open PowerPoint with the default blank theme. I found this one on by searching for photos and the keyword “unity.” Look for a striking image that you could crop to a square shape (1:1 aspect ratio). Add interest to a sales page or training announcementįind an image that you want to use.I’m going to show you how to create this logo - and you can customize it in any way you want. Would you like to create your own logo, product image, or course symbol in PowerPoint in a few minutes - following some easy steps?
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