Sunday, April 25, 2010

This is urgent!!?

where can i find a template for microsoft publisher of a 2008 calendar that has 2 months per page and is in landscape format, not portrait?



Please, this is important. I can't seem to find anything!



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I have spent some time at Office Online searching for a calendar template which has two months on one page, but there simply isn't any to be found. I am very sorry to report this, but if one were there, well, it would be listed at Office Online.



Now, you could take this as a defeat, or a challenge. If you take it as a defeat, then you lose. However, and this is grand, if you take it as a challenge you not only win, but could even more! You could have the self esteem of rising above a seeming limitation, and bask in the sweetness of victory, and have others use your work in theirs, and, possibly get recognition and extra credit at school or a job advancement due to showing initative and imagination!



You could create your own template! I am not kidding, nor am I making fun of you. I am very serious. It is not difficult to create templates. In fact, it is actually rather simple if you know Publisher very well at all.



All you need to do is format it yourself. Thats it, truly. Where do most of the templates you download from Office Online come from? Why, people just like you! Look under the title of the template and you will see the name of the individual who submitted a particular template. These are folks just like you and I. They are of all ages, sexes, and education levels. If they can do it so too can you.



Just download one of the other calendar templates and check out its format. Get an idea of how it is formed, what goes where, and then draw out your own idea onto paper. Write down what margins you want, whether you want footers, and use a piece of graph paper to draw it out. Once you have you idea, it is fairly simple to put in together.



All you need is a rough outline to get started. With the outline in Publisher, you can then use different fonts, font sizes, font colors, and placement of the squares.



Start with a simple outline of your ideal template, and then use the formatting tools to arrange everything as you would like it. Then, just save it in the template extension, and upload it to Office Online for submission.



Of course, you will already have your own calendar, and your work would be complete. Just store your template in the template folder and you can use it anytime you like, let others use it too.



I really believe you could do this. Anyone with a rudimentary understanding of how Publisher works can do this. It is *not* difficult, only a bit intimidating. Why not give it a try? What do you have to lose?



You can even download a calendar template from Office Online and use it to see how it is done. It truly isn't difficult at all.



Whatever you decide I wish you the best. Good luck and much success with your project. Have a nice day.



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http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templa...

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