Quote Originally Posted by macropod
Hi dorogoi,

Rather than explicitly changing the font colour for each footnote/endnote, you'd do better to modify the Styles. You only need to do that once per document and allows your footnotes and endnotes to acquire the desired attributes via the Style definitions. In that regard, however, I note you've applied the "Endnote Text" Style to both footnotes and endnotes - the former really should use the "Footnote Text" Style.

I also note that you're explicitly superscripting all footnotes and endnotes. That will mess up any formatting involving the use of superscripting & subscripting in the footnotes and endnotes. Again, if you're after a small font, simply format the Style to suit.
I see. I wasn't aware I could create a style that would take care of the complexity of my need (superscripted and colored reference mark with the note text in regular "Endnote Text" style.

Why do you suggest that I should apply footnote style to references that were footnotes? Is it to differentiate each type of note from each other?

With regards to the superscripting, I'm only superscripting (and coloring) the reference mark, not the text of the note. This is a direct requirement for the program. Without going into ungodly detail, the intention of the program is to prepare a given Word document for importation into another -very- inflexible desktop publishing application (with a name that sounds like it's a very fast subatomic particle). During importation of a Word document, it will convert all foot/endnote reference marks into Roman Numerals without regard for its source. Converting said notes to plain text with this macro prior to importation permits its original numbering scheme to survive unscathed.