How to make a Windows 7 Theme Pack

Many will call me trivial, but my initial disappointment with Windows 7 occurred when I discovered that it uses Themes rather than a single desktop wallpaper.  I had just discovered lots of fab new wallpaper via Vladstudio and InterfaceLIFT and was excited to give my favorites each a turn at presenting themselves on my desktop but could not do so because I didn’t understand the Theme Pack workings.  I allowed this annoyance to slip past me for approximately a month until a friend introduced me to The Windows Club, a site loaded with insider info on Windows 7, a site that I will now visit frequently to keep myself in the know.  I don’t like being clueless, and I still have much to learn about Windows 7.  In fact, I can’t even answer the Poll Daddy Poll on The Windows Club site because it does not give the option, “Yes, I have upgraded to Windows 7, but I am still kinda clueless.”

Anyways. . . . A quick search of The Windows Club yielded, voilá, a tutorial for creating one’s own Theme Pack.  Excited as I was with this information, I decided it was only fair to share my success here for the benefit of any out there who may be searching for a solution to the Theme Pack mystery.  Because I found the tutorial slightly confusing (duh, maybe it was just me) I’m going to provide the link to the tutorial here as well as my own interpretation of the instructions.  Using one or the other or a combination of the two, I am confident that you also will be able to create your own .themepack files to use and share.  For those of you out there who are scratching your head and wondering what a Theme Pack is I provide the following definition gleaned from The Windows Club.  A Theme Pack consists of four items: 1) Wallpaper with or without slideshows; 2) Window color; 3) Sounds; and 4) A screensaver (or not).  Don’t ask me how it works, ‘cause I’ve no clue!

How to create a Windows 7 Theme Pack: (my overly simplified version for those who need it)

  1. Create a folder in the Pictures Library.  Give it the name that you would like to call your Theme Pack.
  2. Add the wallpaper(s) that you would like to be a part of your Theme Pack to the new folder.
  3. Right click on the Desktop and choose Personalize:  Desktop > Personalize
  4. First, apply the default Windows 7 Theme.  Then select (click on) Desktop Background (located bottom left).
  5. At top right of new screen, choose Browse to select the folder which includes your desired wallpapers (make sure all are selected or checked).
  6. In the same screen choose from bottom the Picture Position, Timing to Change the pictures, and whether or not you want them to shuffle.  Now choose Save Changes.
  7. Next select and edit one at a time the other choices at the bottom of the screen:  Window Color, Sounds, and Screen Saver. (If so desired.)
  8. When you are done, click on Save Theme, give the theme a name (easiest if you name it the same as the folder), and voilá, you have your own Theme Pack.
  9. If you want to share your Theme Pack with a friend, highlight the theme (left click on it) and then right click on it and choose Save Theme for Sharing. Your friend can easily install this Theme Pack by just double clicking on it.

And that’s it folks.  Pretty easy, huh!  If you wish to follow the directions from The Windows Club, click here.

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