
Make sure that the text frame is selected.Select the frame and the Selection tool by pressing the Escape key.

To make the letter large enough to use as a design element, you can change the text formatting, including the size and font family.

For the sake of this example we will be wrapping our text around our object shape. That is where the last two buttons would be used, jump object and jump to next column. Now, perhaps our image is going to be in the middle of text but we only want it to wrap on the top and bottom or just the top of the image. If you wish to have the text follow that shape you would select the second wrap (third button from the left), the wrap around object shape. You may notice our example has a picture within a round shape. Step 2 – Choose your wrap The first wrap choice (second button from the left) is the wrap around bounding box button, which will do exactly what it states and wrap all four sides of the bounding box as seen in the example below. The default is to have no wrap, which is the first icon button on the very left. You will notice there are five icon buttons at the top of the pallet to select what kind of wrap you would like to place on your object.

Then take a look at your text wrap pallet (Window Menu>Text Wrap). Step 1 – Select the object you would like to wrap Select the object you would like to wrap just like you would do in Quark. In this tutorial we will go through a text wrap step-by-step in InDesign. The other thing Quark users need to adjust to with InDesign is working with pallets instead of dialog windows. There are a few other new terms to get used to as well, so here is a little QuarkXPress-to-Adobe InDesign translation chart: Runaround = Text Wrap Text Box = Text Frame Item = Object Get Text = Place While the terminology is different, the concepts are pretty much the same. Honestly I still say runaround every once in awhile, but at least I know that in the InDesign menu options I need to look for the term text wrap. One of the items that took me a little while to adapt to was calling what I knew as a runaround in QuarkXPress, a text wrap in InDesign. For those designers switching from QuarkXPress to Adobe InDesign there is a bit of a learning curve and changes in terminology to get used to.
