In a similar manner to color and gradient fills, you can fill shapes in Keynote with images. You can use any kind of image that Keynote can import.
A new addition to Keynote 2 is the tinted image fill , which overlays a color tint on the image fill (for example, you could overlay a sepia tint to a photograph).
| 1. | Display the Graphic Inspector. |
| 2. | Select the shape you want to fill. |
| 3. | In the Fill section of the Graphic Inspector, choose Image Fill from the pop-up menu ( Figure 5.37 ). Figure 5.37. When you choose Image Fill, you can see a preview of the image in the image well. By default, the shape will be filled with one of the Keynote file's chart patterns. |
| 4. | To pick an image for the fill, do one of the following: - Drag an image from the Media browser window into the image well in the Fill section of the Graphic Inspector.
- Click the Choose button.
An Open dialog appears; navigate to the image you want and click Open . The image fills the shape ( Figure 5.38 ). Figure 5.38. The image of the tiger fits neatly into the shape, because the Scale to Fill option was chosen from the Size pop-up menu. |
| 5. | Choose from the Size pop-up menu to set the way the image fills the shape. See the "Image Fill Options" sidebar for more information. |
| 1. | Display the Graphic Inspector. |
| 2. | Select the shape you want to fill. |
| 3. | In the Fill section of the Graphic Inspector, choose Tinted Image Fill from the pop-up menu ( Figure 5.39 ). Figure 5.39. Use the Tinted Image Fill to add interesting color overlays to standard image fills. |
| 4. | Add an image to the fill, using one of the techniques in Step 4 of the previous task. The image fills the shape. |
| 5. | Choose a tint for the image by clicking the color tint well, which opens the Colors window. |
| 6. | Set the color and opacity of the tint using the controls in the Colors window ( Figure 5.40 ). Figure 5.40. This shape was filled with an image of my cat (top), then turned into a tinted image fill (bottom) by changing the pop-up menu in the Graphic Inspector. The tint takes on the color you set. By changing the opacity of the tint, you can make the underlying image more or less visible. |