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How to Place Your Styles in the Word 2013 Style Gallery

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Updated:  
2016-03-27 12:00:26
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Word 2010 For Dummies
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The Style Gallery in Word 2013 appears on the Home tab and is entirely customizable. If you’re going to the trouble of creating your own template with your own styles, why not modify the template so that you can put your styles in the Style Gallery?

Start by purging styles you don’t want in the Gallery:

Click the down-pointing arrow to reveal the entire Style Gallery.

Click the down-pointing arrow to reveal the entire Style Gallery.

Styles are in the Styles group on the Home tab of the ribbon.

Right-click a Style tile.

Right-click a Style tile.

Word displays a pop-up menu of actions you can apply to the selected style.

Choose the command Remove From Style Gallery.

Choose the command Remove From Style Gallery.

Poof! It’s gone.

To add your own styles, start by applying the formatting you want to some text in your document.

To add your own styles, start by applying the formatting you want to some text in your document.

Add any formatting options that you want included in the style.

With the formatted text selected, click the down-pointing arrow to display the Style Gallery and choose Create a Style to display the Create New Style from Formatting dialog box.

With the formatted text selected, click the down-pointing arrow to display the Style Gallery and choose Create a Style to display the Create New Style from Formatting dialog box.

Type a descriptive name in the Name text box for the style you want to add to the Style Gallery.

Click OK to add your style to the Style Gallery.

Click OK to add your style to the Style Gallery.

That’s it!

About This Article

This article is from the book: 

About the book author:

Dan Gookin has been writing about technology for 20 years. He has contributed articles to numerous high-tech magazines and written more than 90 books about personal computing technology, many of them accurate.
He combines his love of writing with his interest in technology to create books that are informative and entertaining, but not boring. Having sold more than 14 million titles translated into more than 30 languages, Dan can attest that his method of crafting computer tomes does seem to work.
Perhaps Dan’s most famous title is the original DOS For Dummies, published in 1991. It became the world’s fastest-selling computer book, at one time moving more copies per week than the New York Times number-one best seller (although, because it’s a reference book, it could not be listed on the NYT best seller list). That book spawned the entire line of For Dummies books, which remains a publishing phenomenon to this day.
Dan’s most recent titles include PCs For Dummies, 9th Edition; Buying a Computer For Dummies, 2005 Edition; Troubleshooting Your PC For Dummies; Dan Gookin’s Naked Windows XP; and Dan Gookin’s Naked Office. He publishes a free weekly computer newsletter, “Weekly Wambooli Salad,” and also maintains the vast and helpful Web site www.wambooli.com.