I was able to get the default color to change by switching from html to rich
text format. However in doing this my signature whitch is composed in html is
not carried over. when you look in signatures it does not show you where the
signature is but might show you the file name.
Roady [MVP] - 19 Mar 2008 15:12 GMT
Is there a question involved here?

Signature
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
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Real World Questions, Real World Answers
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> I was able to get the default color to change by switching from html to
> rich
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> the
> signature is but might show you the file name.
dlw - 19 Mar 2008 15:52 GMT
sig files are in documets and settings / <username> / application data /
microsoft / signatures
You are better off editing the html sig files yourself, Outlook does of
terrible job with them.
> I was able to get the default color to change by switching from html to rich
> text format. However in doing this my signature whitch is composed in html is
> not carried over. when you look in signatures it does not show you where the
> signature is but might show you the file name.
VanguardLH - 19 Mar 2008 16:11 GMT
>I was able to get the default color to change by switching from html
>to rich
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> where the
> signature is but might show you the file name.
Is it guaranteed that all recipients of your e-mails are also using
Outlook? No other e-mail clients can render Rich-Text Formatted
e-mails than Outlook. You also need to make sure that all recipients
are within your same Exchange organization as RTF e-mails sent hopping
across multiple mail hosts often gets corrupted due to interrogation
for anti-spam or other purposes.
If you use RTF in your e-mails:
- All recipients of your e-mails must also have Outlook.
- Don't send your e-mails across the Internet.