When
you receive a PowerPoint presentation and only need to save a single
image, rather than the full presentation itself, there’s actually a
pretty simple solution available, even if you can’t right-click the
image at first. Embedded images don’t always survive the transition as
separate files when being emailed around in a PowerPoint document, which
can be fixed by forcing PowerPoint to save the image as a GIF or JPEG.
To
start the process, click the image in question so it’s highlighted on
the PowerPoint slide. With the image highlighted, navigate to the “Home”
tab at the top of the presentation and click the “Copy” button, which
is located in the “Clipboard” section of the ribbon.
Now
that you’ve got the picture copied to the clipboard, you can save it as
a proper image file by clicking the “Paste” button in the “Home” tab
and then selecting the “Paste Special” option.
Type
whatever name you want to use for the picture in the text box and then
select the type of image file you’d like to save the picture as from the
drop-down menu. Click “Save” to save the image to your computer’s hard
drive.
But
what if you still can’t right-click the picture for some reason? In
this instance, there’s still a way to save the image, although it
requires a little more effort. Remember how you previously copied the
image to the clipboard? Since it’s still saved there, open up any image
editing program that lets you paste images. Even something as simple as
Microsoft Paint will work.
Create
a new file in the image editing program and then click the “Paste”
option at the top of the screen, or press “Ctrl” and “V” to manually
paste the image. Now you can save the image as whatever file type you’d
like in Paint (or whichever image editing tool you are using).
In
the event that all these attempts fail, there remains one final option
using a keyboard shortcut. Navigate to the slide containing the picture,
and take a screenshot by tapping the “FN” and “Prtsc” keys on your
keyboard. This shortcut saves an exact copy of everything currently on
your screen into the clipboard.
Return
to your image editing program and click “Paste” to bring up the
screenshot. You can then use the program’s “crop” feature to simply cut
out everything on the screen besides the image you need.