Merging Shapes in PowerPoint
- Use any shapes you need to build your desired shape—it does not matter if they overlap, but make sure to cover any gaps you don’t want.
- Select all of your shapes—the formatting of the shape you choose first in this step will apply to your entire shape once it’s merged.
- Select Merge Shapes from the left of the ribbon on the Format Pane.
- Choose Union.
- This will merge the shapes you’ve used into one unified shape.
Hello, For spreadsheet table image, how to merge fragments made from each column (cropped to narrow width)?. Goal is to reduce table width (original for computer monitor view) for printing. Thanks Ahead!
Hi Sunny, unfortunately you cannot merge images. The features described on this page are just for shapes. If you’ve taken multiple screenshots of your table, you could arrange them next to each other, select all of them at the same time, and then right click –> group. This would make it so when you’re resizing the table, all of the images move and are scaled together instead of individually. Let me know if I am understanding your question correctly!
My “Merge Shapes” function in PowerPoint 2013 (Win10) always appears with grey colour, not black, so when I click it doesn’t work. Is there any problem with my PowerPoint, or maybe my laptop is containing virus?
Hi GreenNature, unfortunately I can’t speak to any functionality specific to PowerPoint 2013 since I’m using the new version of PowerPoint, but I would advise you to check two things. First make sure you’ve already selected your shapes. The features won’t turn black until after you’ve selected more than one shape at the same time. (Use the SHIFT key while clicking on your shapes to select more than one.) Second, make sure the shapes aren’t grouped together. The merge feature doesn’t work on grouped items. It also doesn’t work on tables.