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Crop Screenshot in Safari
Effortlessly Crop Safari Screenshots on Mac
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
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Frequently Asked Questions
First, capture your screenshot in Safari. Upload it to the online annotation tool, where you can crop and annotate it to highlight specific parts.
Yes, after taking a screenshot, upload it to the annotation tool. You can use pen, text, or shape tools to annotate the screenshot.
To capture an entire page in Safari, you might need third-party tools that support full-page screenshots as default tools may not include this feature.
Yes, once you have your entire page screenshot, upload it to the tool to crop and highlight desired sections effectively.
You can upload screenshots in .jpg, .jpeg, .png, and .webp formats to the annotation tool for cropping and editing.
No, you can crop and annotate screenshots directly in your browser without any software installation.
Yes, use the shapes tool to draw rectangles, circles, lines, or arrows to emphasize areas after cropping your screenshot.
Use the highlighting tool to emphasize important sections of your screenshot after cropping it.
Yes, the tool can process files up to 100 MB size, which should accommodate most screenshot files.
The tool doesn't provide text editing within the image. It adds notes or annotations on top of the screenshot.
No, this tool is only available on desktop browsers, so you cannot crop screenshots on mobile devices.
The tool handles one file at a time, so you can only crop and annotate one screenshot per session.
Yes, you can use the highlighting tool to emphasize text areas on your cropped screenshot, aiding readability and focus.
The annotation tool works in any desktop browser, so you can crop screenshots taken on Safari for Mac or any uploaded from Windows.
Yes, logged-in users can save their annotated and cropped screenshots directly to Evernote for easy management.