![Place Various Photos In Powerpoint For Mac Place Various Photos In Powerpoint For Mac](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125501521/611074331.png)
![Grid lines in powerpoint for mac Grid lines in powerpoint for mac](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125501521/924242095.png)
I am preparing technical presentations with a lot of graphics using PowerPoint 2011 for Mac (version 14.4.9). Whenever I insert an image, it is set to crop to fill by default (the most useless option in my opinion). Here is how the default option looks like: Then, it turns out that for every image, I have to manually set it to crop to fit and resize the container box correctly. Just to look like that: Is there a way to override this default behavior to get the inserted images as they are without any funny cropping? I tried to research the problem, but without any luck.
PowerPoint for Office 365 for Mac, PowerPoint 2019 for Mac, PowerPoint 2016 for Mac PowerPoint for Mac 2011 You can add an image (sometimes transparent and called a watermark ) to the slide master so that it appears on every slide in the presentation. If you’re using a PC and presenting on a PC, then there is a smooth work around for this issue. (When you involve Mac systems, the solution is a bit rougher. See Tip #11.) Here’s the trick: When you save your PowerPoint file (only on a PC), you should click Save Options in the 'Save As ' dialog window.
One way to do that is to use the 'Placeholder' in PowerPoint. Use View → Slide Master, then choose your layout.
Select 'Insert Placeholder' and choose Picture. Use the cursor to drag the picture to size and position it. You can make multiple placeholders, but you do not have to use all of them if a slide does not require it. From now on all new slides (with the chosen layout) will have the placeholders where you can insert a picture and they all will be cropped to auto fit the placeholder, or auto fill. What you are trying to do is not possible. The Crop to fill will take the original and without shrinking it will use the center part and fill it in the preassigned Place Holder. The crop to fit will have to reduce the original to show it as whole in preassigned place holder.
Here is an example (left and right are place holders) while the middle is the original. So even if using the crop to fit as default the image size will be what your place holder was. Thus using the Crop to Fill is better option while using the Crop tool to move to the part of the image you wanted to show in full size. The problem with your request is that the Crop to Fit will always require adjustment depending on the original image size.