Once you have at least one section break in your document, an extra option will be available in the Apply To dropdown, to allow you to apply your margin changes just to the section you are in. Add a section break by going to Layout | Breaks | Section Breaks and choose the kind of break you want. If you have a more complicated document with lots of different margin changes, you can also use Word’s Sections feature and apply different margins to each section. Or select text before opening the Page Setup dialog and there will be a Apply to: Selected Text option. You can also choose to apply the change from this point forward, allowing you to have different margins in different parts of the document.
No gutter:Īpplying Margin Changes to Part of a DocumentĪt the bottom of Margins tab of the Page Setup dialog there is a dropdown box where you can select what part of the document to apply your changes to. Enter the amount and select whether the gutter is to be at the left or the top of the page, depending on where you are going to bind them.īelow are some views of the settings, and how the page would look, with no gutter, and with the gutter on the left and on the top. What is the gutter setting that appears under the margin fields? This is a printing term referring to the amount of extra space that you need to leave for any binding or staples to hold the pages together (what Word calls Mirror Margins). The preview at the bottom of the window will give you a very rough idea of how the document will look with your selected measurements. You can do this either by clicking the up and down arrows in each field to change the margins in small increments, or you can simply type the number into each field. In most cases, all you need to worry about is the top section where you set the size of the margins for the top, bottom, left and right of the page. The Page Setup dialog will open, with the Margins tab selected. If none of the options you try give the result you want, go to the bottom of the list and select Custom Margins. In Page View with pages separated, the top and bottom margins can also be dragged around on the vertical ruler. Select the text then drag the margin markers to the settings you want. Margin shown in the ruler with different setting for a single paragraph. The bottom marker on the ruler is the margin. The other way to change margins is with the ruler. If you have set your own custom margins before, there will also be an option at the top to set your margins to whatever you set them to last time you did so. In this case, one side of the page has to leave room for the binding, and the extra space will be on the left on one side of the page, and on the right-hand side on the reverse, so the facing pages will ‘mirror’ each other. The Mirrored option is a bit less obvious, use this one if you are printing double-sided pages that are to be bound together like a book or magazine. Normal, Narrow, Moderate and Wide are fairly self-explanatory – try each one to see if any of these preset options give you the result you want. There are several default options that you can choose from. To do this, go to Layout > Margins or use the Ruler to drag the margins. You should now be able to enter your custom margin settings.Sometimes we want to change the margins around a Word document, either to change the way the page looks, or to get the text to fit onto the page. Now click on the “Custom Margins…” option at the very bottom of the list. To create custom margins in Word 2010 (and my heart goes out to anyone playing with margins in Word):ģ. Your margins should now be reset to the Word default margins. Scroll down on the list of margin options and left-click on “normal”.
It should be around the third item from the left.ģ. Head to the navigation bar at the top of MS Word and click on the “Page Layout” tab.Ģ.
To reset margins to Word 2010 default page margins:ġ.
#How to change the margins in word 10 how to
Take a look at the screenshot below to give you an idea of how to work with margins in Word 2010, and then follow the directions below that apply to you (to reset margins, or to find where to create custom margins): Margins have always been frustrating to deal with, and they are even more so in Word 2010 because the options to change or reset the margins are hard to find.