Now that Keynote comes pre-built with icons and you can create your own (point #1), you can design, group, and arrange items on a longer slide that is visually appealing. Besides the standard and widescreen options, you can create a “Custom slide size.” One note, do this BEFORE you create your slides or infographic as it will alter the images and text on your slide if you do it after the fact. You can also change the size and shape of your keynote slide in the “Document” menu of your presentation.
Keynote comes with multiple export options including images and PDFs. The good news is, you can re-arrange slides and the links will remain intact. Select the slide that you want the image to link to. Two-finger click (right-click) on an object to “Add link” then select Slide as the link destination. Create a Choose-your-own-Adventure storyĭo you remember HyperStudio stacks? How about those old Choose-Your-Own-Adventure stories? With slide hyperlinking in Keynote you can recreate this same feel by making text or images “hyper-linkable”. You’ll be prompted to give it a name and from now on, this icon will appear on your “My shapes” list in Keynote. Once you’ve finished creating your new icon, two-finger click (right-click) on the object and choose “Save to My Shapes”. You can also use tricks like “subtract” to create voids or spaces in your shapes (like when creating an iPad icon). This is different than “Group” as it binds all the assets together into one solid shape. Simply make a bunch of overlapping circles, select all of them, then click on “Arrange” and “Unite” to create a solid icon that you can now change into multiple colors. Let’s say you are wanting to make a cloud icon different than the one in the shapes kit. However, there may be times when the icon you are looking for is not in Keynote. All of these icons can be manipulated, edited, color formatted, and broken apart.
#Load color pallete in powerpoint for mac 2011 update
With the latest iOS11 update there is now a bevy of new icons available.
Here are a few things I bet you didn’t know you could do with Keynote: 1. Even in rooms with the most polished Keynote users, I always show them something they didn’t know they could do with it. I’ve even starting teaching some “Keynote Master Class” courses for teachers and coaches in my district and at other events that I’m a part of. I use Keynote for MacOS for pretty much everything these days.