* Please keep in mind that all text is machine-generated, we do not bear any responsibility, and you should always get advice from professionals before taking any actions. To add text wrapping to an object, follow these steps: Top Offset: Enter value for top Offset modifier to Offset Text wrapping Around Object. You can choose from various vector paths or Edges to be Detect Around Object or image with transparency. Contour Options: Select Contour from this drop-down list, which tells InDesign how edges of image are determine. Wrap Options: Select option to determine on which side of the Object text will wrap. Offset: Enter Offset values for text wrapping on all sides of the Object. No Text is Wrap to leave or Right of image.
Jump to Next Column: Make Text end above image and then jump to Next Column. Jump Object: Make Text wrapping Around image jump from above image to below it, with no Text wrapping to leave or Right of Object in Column.
Wrap Around Object Shape: Wrap Text Around Edges of Object. Wrap Around Bounding Box: Wrap Text Around all sides of Bounding Box of Object. The following list describes what happens when you click one of these buttons to Wrap Text Around objects Shape: no Text Wrap: Use default setting or to Remove any Text wrapping from Select Object. You Use drop-down list at bottom of Text Wrap panel to choose from various Contour Options. Fields are gray out if option isnt available. Below buttons are text fields where you can enter Offset values for Text Wrap. Use five buttons at top of the panel to specify which kind of text wrapping to use for selecting object. You can choose different Text Wrap Options by using the Text Wrap panel, which you open by choosing WindowText Wrap. Wrapping is a typical feature of page layout in print and on the web. May I add that if you have the text box and the shape 'grouped' that you make sure they are ungrouped before trying to apply the above tip then you can group them again after and it works fine.Images can have Text Wrap around them in Adobe InDesign CS6.
This tip has helped me greatly in understanding how to achieve what had become a standard in Quark and seemingly problematic with InDesign. Wow thank you thank you.no more reshaping the text containers to wrap around images that need text on them wooohooo.Ĭomments and thanks still coming in four years after the fact! I've been banging my head against a brick wall over this for ages. HOLY CRAP!!! I knew there had to be an easier way then what I came up with :) Even frustrating at times and now I finally know what to do! Thanks for the tip!ĭitto Shelby. I've been wondering how to do this for a long time. Thank you, exactly what I needed to figure out! Very helpful! Thanks a ton, that's exactly what I was looking for!
Holy crap! you have no idea how much you just helped me! thank you so much! This is a great tip, however if you are using a Mac, you will need to click the text box and go under Object an select frame options (command B) and the click ignore text wrap. You just really helped me out with this post! This will cause the text frame to ignore any text wrap that may be applied to other frames it encounters. Select the Ignore Text Wrap option in the Text Frame Options dialog box, and click OK. In InDesign, if you need to have a text wrap applied to a graphic frame, but then you need to put some text in a frame on top of the graphic, do this: select the text frame that you want to put on top of the graphic, right-click, and choose Text Frame Options from the context menu. This option is located in the Text Wrap panel menu. A new feature of InDesign CS3 is the ability to choose whether text wraps applied to master page objects affect document page text. Text on document pages cannot wrap around master page items. In InDesign CS2, if an object on a Master Page has a text wrap applied, it will only affect text frames that are also located on the master page. InDesign text wraps work regardless of the stacking order of objects. QuarkXPress runarounds only work if the order in which objects are stacked on the page is correct. In InDesign, all objects have text wrap turned off by default. In QuarkXPress, every object has a runaround turned on by default. What QuarkXPress calls a Runaround, InDesign calls a Text Wrap. I've had a lot of questions recently about how InDesign handles Text Wraps, so I thought I'd try to clarify this.