Try changing the crop or sizing of your image to create enough negative space to fit your content. By using negative space as placement for content over images, we can keep the focus on the image front and center, while still supplying a helpful backdrop for any content. Negative space is any area of the image that is not the focus. Negative space is not necessarily white space. There are two key methods to creating contrast: 1.
We want our image treatment to enhance the content, not hide it. Ready to give that image even more power on your slide? Take it full-screen! When working with full-screen images, the most important consideration is creating contrast for your content to stand out on the image. Suddenly, we go from a floating image to one that is anchored and powerful.
Make sure that 3 edges of your image hit the slide edge. The easiest and quickest way to elevate that image is the 3-edge rule. Now that we have selected our “hero” image – the one that really tells our story – how can we treat it so that it looks professional on our slide? Instead, find one image that captures your point or the mood of the information, and allow that to stand out.Īn audience has a better chance to connect with one image, rather than bouncing through several. When we highlight everything, we highlight nothing. When we over include images to drive one point home, we’re actually diminishing the value of each independent image.
If a picture is worth a thousand words, then cramming 5 of them on a slide. Recently, we posted on how to source killer images, but now that you have them, how do you use those pictures in PowerPoint? Today we’ll review some of the ways that the pros use images in presentation slides. 3 Tips for Using Pictures in PowerPoint like a Pro