Until you know what this means and have enough experimented with it, never NEVER anchor images (or more generally frames) To page. This mode is reserved for a cheap replacement for desktop publishing (DTP) mode.
Anchor mode only tells Writer to which “reference” the frame/image is attached so that when the “reference” moves due to edits, the frame/image can follow the “reference”. To page creates a fixed reference where the frame will never move. To paragraph and To character are equivalent and attach the frame to some paragraph. They differ only in the case where the paragraph straddles a page break. As character makes the frame part of the paragraph and you won’t be able to position it manually.
To summarise, you want To paragraph anchor mode.
You can of course start positioning the frame by dragging it with the mouse, but consider this is a coarse approximation. Right-click on the frame and Properties
. The Type
tab has a Position section where you’ll finely set the position properties of your frame.
If the frame should remain in relation with the paragraph, select a reference containing Paragraph. If the frame should go to a specific position in the page not at all related to the paragraph, select a reference with word Page. The difference between area/margin and text area is: the latter excludes spacing above/below and indents, i.e. the “location” is strictly the rectangle containing paragraph text.
If all your frames share the same positioning parameters, it is convenient to store them in a frame style and apply it to the frames. This allows, among others, to reposition all frames simultaneously. simply by updating the style.