About us
English
Copy & Paste Photo on Opera
Seamless Copy and Paste for Images in Opera Browser

Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, you can copy images while browsing Opera and paste them into documents for easy note-taking or presentations. Simply right-click on the image and select "Copy Image," then paste it into your document.
Right-click on the image you wish to save and select "Save Image As" from the context menu. Choose your preferred location and save the file to your computer.
Yes, if your email client supports rich text formatting, you can paste images directly into the body of an email. This is done easily by copying the image and pasting it into the email draft window.
Opera supports common web image formats like JPEG, PNG, and GIF for copy-paste actions. When browsing, ensure the image is compatible for seamless copying and pasting.
Copying multiple photos requires selecting each image individually. Currently, there's no drag-and-drop feature for multiple images in Opera. Paste each image separately into your document or application.
Yes, after you copy an image from Opera, paste it into your preferred image editing software. This allows you to make any necessary edits or enhancements before using the image further.
Use Opera's built-in snapshot tool to capture and copy screenshots of webpages. Access it via the menu or shortcut key, select the area you wish to capture, and copy it to your clipboard.
Copying images from Opera generally retains the original quality, but the resulting quality can depend on how the image is processed by the destination application or document.
Copying very large images might result in slower performance or issues with pasting into memory-limited applications. Ensure the destination application can handle large files.
Yes, Opera supports image copying and pasting on both Windows and Mac OS platforms. The processes are similar, allowing cross-platform functionality.
Right-click on the image and select "Copy Image URL". This copies the direct link of the image to your clipboard, and you can paste it as a reference in your notes or documents.
No specific character limit applies directly to image descriptions, but ensure the image's caption or description fits your document's formatting and audience needs.
Opera doesn't support editing copied images directly within the browser. You must paste them into an external editor for modifications.
Copy and paste directly from Opera into cloud service interfaces like Google Docs or similar, assuming they support image pasting. Alternatively, save then upload images as files.
There's no explicit max file size for individual images copied from Opera, but browser and system memory limits could impact handling extremely large files.