Replying with a sig.

D

daniel sweeney

I have just started using outlook 2007. I have a problem that I cant seem to work out. Any help would be deeply appreciated.

1) I have a sig. My sig is designed using 3 colors and some bold text. For example my web address, phone number is blue and bold. When I start a new e-mail and click on my sig. it comes in with the blue bold text. But if I click on a reply my sig comes in all regular font and in all black. Is there a setting? Where is the sig. info stored? Please keep in mind have more than 1 e-mail account I'm checking. When I do a reply it is not from my default account.



Thank you for your time and help
Daniel
 
B

Brian Tillman

daniel sweeney said:
I have just started using outlook 2007. I have a problem that I cant
seem to work out. Any help would be deeply appreciated.

1) I have a sig. My sig is designed using 3 colors and some bold
text. For example my web address, phone number is blue and bold. When
I start a new e-mail and click on my sig. it comes in with the blue
bold text. But if I click on a reply my sig comes in all regular font
and in all black. Is there a setting? Where is the sig. info stored?
Please keep in mind have more than 1 e-mail account I'm checking.
When I do a reply it is not from my default account.

When you reply or forward a message, Outlook uses the formatting information
contained in the original message. I don't believe you can change that.
 
D

daniel sweeney

So if I create a Sig in blue bold text. I use this Sig.in a new e-mail it will appear in blue bold text. But if I reply or forward the Sig. then it goes back to the standard black regular text?

Thank you for you time and help.
Daniel
 
B

Brian Tillman

daniel sweeney said:
So if I create a Sig in blue bold text. I use this Sig.in a new
e-mail it will appear in blue bold text. But if I reply or forward
the Sig. then it goes back to the standard black regular text?

It will revert to formatting contained within the message to which you are
replying or that you are forwarding, so, yes, what you describe is likely.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top