There may be instances, however, when you want to manually adjust the kerning between two characters. In most cases, this type of kerning will be acceptable. Adjust the character point size to indicate when Word should start adjusting kerning.Click on the Kerning for Fonts check box.In later versions of Word make sure the Advanced tab is selected. In Word 2007 make sure the Character Spacing tab is selected.
Select the text whose kerning you want to adjust.To change kerning automatically, perform the following steps: In Word, kerning can be adjusted either automatically or manually. This makes the text both more appealing and more readable. Kerning is a typographical term describing the process of moving letters closer together, in an effort to overcome the illusion of too much space between letters. This problem normally appears when the left character in a pair has a stroke (a line) that travels diagonally from left to right. Depending on the characters, this can cause an illusion that two characters are spaced too far apart, when in reality they follow the standard spacing conventions for the typeface. Unfortunately, not all characters appear the same width when read on a printed page. This spacing determines how close adjacent characters are to each other. When a font is designed, a certain amount of space is designated for inter-character spacing.