

to get your cursor to where you want the text to be in order to line up with the lines on the certificate.

Now you can use the enter key, space bar, tab, etc. After that, you should be able to move your cursor back to the first line of text you typed and use the enter key without the scanned image moving around. Now, move your cursor away from the text you typed and click on the picture of the certificate to select it, and move it back up to the upper left corner. The picture of the certificate will move down along with the text you just typed. Now re-position your cursor at the beginning of the line of text you just typed and hit enter several times. Don’t worry about the fact that it is nowhere near the line where you want it to be. Start typing the first line of text you will insert. Your cursor is probably in the upper left corner.
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Right click again, select text wrapping, and select “behind text.” Move the form so that its top left corner aligns exactly with the upper left corner of the Word document. Assuming your form is landscape, right click on the picture, select size and adjust height to 8.5 inches so form is filling the entire page. Open a blank Word document and set the page orientation to landscape or portrait, depending on your certificate. (You need to have a scanner also.) If there’s already an easier way built into Word to do this, and I just don’t know about it, my apologies. Here’s a relatively easy way to fill in pre-printed certificates or forms on your computer using Microsoft Word.
