If you drop a photo with a white background on top of a colored content frame in InDesign, the background isn’t automatically removed. Similarly, text, by default, remains in a rectangular frame. Just because digital images are unavoidably rectangular, though, doesn’t mean that the layout of your documents must inevitably follow straight lines. Instead, you can hide the background of an image, so that whatever is behind it shows through, and wrap text around the contours of any shape. Warnings Writer Bio
