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Cut Photo in Linux
Easily Cut Photos in Linux with Online Tools
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
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Frequently Asked Questions
You can cut a photo in Linux by using any online image annotation tool that allows cropping and editing within your browser. Upload your image and use the available tools to adjust as needed.
Yes, you can edit photos directly on Linux using in-browser annotation tools. No download or installation required, making it suitable for all Linux distributions.
You can cut and edit images in formats like JPG, JPEG, PNG, and WEBP. Simply upload your image and use the tool’s features to modify it.
While cropping in PDF is not directly supported, you can convert the PDF to an image format first and then use online tools to crop the photo.
While specialized picture frame features are not available, you can use shapes and annotations in the tool to create border effects around your images.
Drag and drop your image into the browser tool or use a file selector to upload JPG, PNG, or WEBP files for editing. Ensure each file is under 100 MB.
Yes, multi-page PDFs can be uploaded, but annotation is page-by-page. Navigate through the document to annotate each page separately.
Yes, after cutting and annotating your photo, download it with all edits embedded. You also have the option to save to Evernote if logged in.
Yes, each image or PDF uploaded should not exceed 100 MB. Larger files need to be resized before uploading.
Absolutely, the tool operates entirely within your web browser, perfect for Linux as no additional software is required.
Yes, free users can upload and annotate images without logging in, but downloading the edited file requires an account.
No, the tool is optimized for desktop use only. Access it via a desktop or laptop browser for full functionality.
No, text editing is not supported. You can only add annotations or drawings on top of the image.
No, this tool does not support real-time collaboration. It's designed for single-user sessions.
No, editing is limited to one file at a time. For multiple files, complete one session then start another.