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Recently the look and feel of my Microsoft Office 2007 products (on a Windows XP system) has taken on a "retro" look. I'm not sure what caused this to happen but I would like to return it to the standard look and feel. How do I go about changing this? No other applications, including Windows itself, have this issue.

Example Screen Shots

9
  • 8
    I quite like the retro look, could just be my age though :-)
    – Joe Taylor
    Feb 4, 2011 at 15:34
  • It seems like some files were replaced by copies from older Office versions... Try running Office MenuOptionsResourcesDiagnose. Feb 4, 2011 at 15:36
  • If it is Windows 7, Did Aero get disabled by chance?
    – Moab
    Feb 4, 2011 at 16:23
  • 4
    ... I don't suppose (and this is a very long shot) if you go to resolution and display settings, did you lower the screen bits to either 256 or 16 bit colour? Feb 4, 2011 at 20:45
  • 2
    Could it be that somehow, the shortcut for Word was altered so that the compatibility mode is set and the program launches in 256 colour mode?
    – Steven Don
    Feb 5, 2011 at 1:05

8 Answers 8

13

I had the same problem at work - I'm an IT engineer at a hospital.

A user worked with dual screens: one screen had the normal 32-bit color setting, the other had 8-bit color settings configured. Office had the 'retro look' you describe.

After changing the second screen to 32-bit color, Office looked normal again. For some unknown reason, Office was taking its color settings from the second screen. Just go to Display Options, select the second screen and modify the color settings to 32-bit.

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    There's no way to force office to only run on a single monitor; so office needs to default to the lowest common denominator. Jun 29, 2012 at 17:09
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I've just managed to replicate this under Windows 7, but the relevant setting is available under Windows XP.

Right-click on the program's shortcut then select the 'Compatibility' tab and under 'Settings' select 'Run in 256 colors' to replicate this.

I'm not sure whether the behaviour is exactly the same as you are seeing, but it seems very similar.

2

If it's not the global color setting in Windows, it could be that Word is running in compatibility mode. Right click the shortcut, Compatibility tab and uncheck "Reduced color mode"

0

I've seen this in my workplace when a device driver called "Microsoft SMS Mirror Driver" is enabled. Disabling this device resolves the issue.

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In my experience, in Windows7 - Appearance - Advanced appearance settings, change 3d objects so they are NOT white, set back to grey, save changes and restart MS Office 2007 and it has solved my issue!

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To fix this, and to choose a different theme, you need to click on the Office logo (top left hand corner), then go to Options. In the pop up window, you should see something like a theme or colour. Changing this will fix it.

I can't give you a proper answer as I'm using Office 2010, but I don't think it's too dissimilar. Also check to see if your Office is using the accessibility view for the hard of seeing.

EDIT: Ok try this. Hold the SHIFT + ALT then the Print Screen button.

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  • This allows you to choose the colour scheme - Black, Blue, Silver. Nowhere does it show a low quality / hi quality feel.
    – Joe Taylor
    Feb 4, 2011 at 15:31
  • I know, but as I said I have Office 2010 so I can't exactly give the best answer. Frustratingly my students could change Office to look like what this guy has, but I can't remember how they done it! EDIT: Just asked one of them over facebook, waiting for the reply! Feb 4, 2011 at 16:12
  • No go with the SHIFT + ALT + Pring Screen. It definitely changed the contrast but it still looks "retro."
    – brainimus
    Feb 4, 2011 at 20:39
-3

To fix the problem, disable the LANDesktop network adapter:

  1. Control Panel;
  2. Admin Tools;
  3. Computer Management;
  4. Device Management;
  5. Display Adapters;

Disable the LANDesktop display adapter by right clicking it.

-3

Disabling "Air" display should solve your problem. Air display has to do with Apple, it's not needed.

Go to:

Start/Computer/Properties/Device Manager/Display Adapter/AIR PLAY

and change the setting.

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    The question was about Microsoft Office 2007. Apple's Air Play is not likely the culprit.
    – dangowans
    Sep 17, 2012 at 17:07

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