PowerPoint isn’t just for rectangles and sad little circles. Hidden inside it is a set of tools that lets you build completely custom shapes by combining two (or more) shapes
PowerPoint isn’t just for rectangles and sad little circles. Hidden inside it is a set of tools that lets you build completely custom shapes by combining two (or more) shapes
If your first instinct when you have data is to insert a pie chart…don’t worry. You’re not alone. But pie charts are almost never the best choice, especially when you
Ever added page numbers in PowerPoint, clicked Apply to All, and then… nothing happened? Congrats. You’ve just encountered one of PowerPoint’s most common (and most annoying) “features.” In this tutorial,
If you’ve ever used Photoshop, Illustrator, or Canva, you might be familiar with clipping paths or clipping masks — basically, making an image fit inside a shape. PowerPoint can do
PowerPoint can do a lot of things. Turning text into outlines — like Illustrator “Create Outlines” — is not one of them. So if you want text that becomes a






