Ross,
I think you are right. You can use an image as stationery. If it is set to background, it will not go out in your email body, however. If it is not set to background, it will. Be careful that you don't inadvertently move the (foreground) stationery image object on your completed page as you prepare your email, or your handwritten notes will not align over it correctly.
My issue for this post is that I have to 'un-background' each of my imported images separately before I can generete email that includes them. Each of my ON 'pages' have several 11-inch pages of imported background images onto which I overwrite notes, highlights, etc. Picking through them individually to un-background (and then re-background) them so I can email them is a pain.
In ON 2003 you didn't need to do that--emails were WYSIWYG. This is another ON 2003 feature that was lost in 2007. At least there is a work-around in this case. -- Thanks Dave
"craigslistross[ at ]gmail.com" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > On Feb 2, 3:55 pm, Lin <L...[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > This is a feature in ON,backgroundis not sent withemailbecause that would > > render all the content including text as images. > > > > You can select all images in foreground and set them to thebackground. But > > can't do the other way around. > > > > --Lin (MS) > > > > "OneDave" wrote: > > > By the way, if I don't set the images asbackground, they appear in theemail. > > > > > If this is a 'feature' of ON 2007, can someone suggest a way for me to > > > removebackgroundstatus from multiple images on a page at once? How about > > > setting all images on a page back tobackgroundwithout selecting them one by > > > one? > > > -- > > > Thanks > > > Dave > > So, is there a good way to email background also, > as part of the email body? I have a tablet PC and > would like to hand-write letters on stationery and > get it all to the recipient. > > Thanks! > ~ross > >
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