

This Mask to Shape option is explained in our Crop Picture to Shape in PowerPoint 2011 for Mac tutorial.įigure 3: Crop option icons appear when a picture is inserted within a placeholder In addition, the Crop tool in PowerPoint 2011 also adds a new feature to crop a picture to a particular shape. You can see them as three icons in a contextual bar, as shown in Figure 3. You can see the Crop options (except the Mask to Shape option) not only within the Crop drop-down gallery (see Figure 2, above), but also when you insert a picture within a content placeholder (see Figure 3, below).



The Crop tool lets you achieve these edits and more. Cropping the same picture in the sample on the right focuses attention solely on her, and creates a more powerful visual.įigure 1: Picture cropped to focus attention on a particular element (Picture from ) Cropping also lets you remove some unwanted areas.įor example, the picture on the left side in Figure 1 below, shows a businesswoman with several of her colleagues blurred into the background. Cropping an area removes unrequired areas, and lets you add focus to the areas of the picture that are relevant to the topic of your presentation. However, even before you play with all these options, you must ponder and decide whether you want to use PowerPoint's Crop options. You can also play with recolor options, and apply Photoshop style filters. You can make corrections to brightness, sharpness, and contrast values. Once you insert a picture in your slide, there is so much you can do to make it appear consistent with the look of your slides.
