우리에 대해
한국어
Turn PNG Image
Transform and Annotate Your PNG Images Online
또는 파일을 끌어다 놓기
PDF 및 이미지 파일 형식 지원 (최대 100MB)
전 세계 수백만 명이 신뢰하는
4.4
G2에서 2,100개 이상의 리뷰
4.4
Capterra에서 8,200개 이상의 리뷰
4.4
앱 스토어에서 73,000개 이상의 리뷰
2.5억
등록된 사용자
50억
생성된 노트
200만
매일 생성된 노트
자주 묻는 질문
Upload your PNG image to the online annotation tool. Use the pen, text, shapes, and highlighting tools to add annotations. Customize colors and styles as needed.
The tool focuses on annotation rather than format conversion. For turning PNG to SVG, use a dedicated format conversion tool.
While you can't directly add a watermark, you can use the text annotation tool in a strategic location as a pseudo-watermark.
Yes, you can customize colors for all annotation tools using the color picker in the toolbar before you apply your annotations to the PNG.
Use the highlighting tool to emphasize important areas on your PNG. Choose your color and drag over the sections you want to highlight.
No, the tool doesn't convert file formats. It's designed for adding annotations to images. Use an image converter for format changes.
Yes, use the text and shape tools to add annotations providing feedback directly on design elements within a PNG image.
Absolutely, you can add textual notes to any part of your transparent PNG using the text annotation tool.
This tool focuses on annotation rather than converting animations. Consider using dedicated software for animations.
Yes, upload the PNG photo and use the annotation tools provided to mark it up, add comments, or highlight areas.
The maximum file size you can upload is 100 MB. Larger files need to be reduced in size before uploading to the tool.
No, the tool is desktop-only and works via desktop or laptop web browsers for optimal performance and use of GUI.
You can annotate one PNG at a time. For sequences, complete annotations on each image, download, and repeat the process.
No, existing text can't be edited. You can only add new annotations over the image, which will appear above any existing elements.
No, you must annotate images one at a time. Each image requires a separate session to complete the annotation process.