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Annotate Non-PDF Images in OS X's Preview

Rob Griffiths, Macworld.com

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The version of Preview in OS X 10.5 has some nice additions to its 10.4 predecessor, including more annotation abilities for PDFs. What I didn't know, until very recently, is that you can also annotate JPEGs, TIFFs, and other non-PDF images. You might not think that's the case, because if you open such an image in Preview, the while the Tools -> Annotate menu is active, all the sub-menus beneath Annotate are grayed out. How can you use a non-active menu item?

In this case, the answer to that question is "by using the same tool on the toolbar." In Preview, select View -> Customize Toolbar, then drag the Annotate tool onto the toolbar. Now open a JPEG, TIFF, PNG, etc. Click and hold on the Annotate menu, and you'll see a drop-down menu showing the four available annotations, as seen in the image at left. Select the tool you'd like to use, then just click-and-drag in the image file to add that annotation.

Once you've placed an annotation, you can also make modifications to it. For the shape annotations, use the minus (-) and equal (=) keys to make the shape's lines thinner or thicker. To change the color of a shape, bring up the color picker (Shift-Command-C, or View -> Show Colors). Select the color you'd like to use, and the shape will instantly change to reflect your selection.

If you're working with the Note tool, the color picker will change the color of the note's text. You can also change the font by using the Fonts panel (Command-T or View -> Show Fonts). Select the text within the note, then choose the font face and size you'd like to use. (You can also change the size of the font in the note using the minus and equal signs.) It may look like you can also use the buttons at the top of the Fonts panel (underline, strikethrough, shadow, etc.), but you can't--while those features will show up as you edit, they'll vanish as soon as you click elsewhere in your Preview document.

If you're annotating a PDF, you can't use the line thickness tools, nor can you change the font face or size of your notes. About the only thing you can do is change the color of shapes on a PDF, using the color wheel. (I'm not sure why annotating is more limited with PDFs, but it is--if you know why this might be the case, I'd love to hear an explanation.)

I assume the Annotation menu should be enabled when working with non-PDF images, and that it's simply a bug that will be addressed in a future update--otherwise, it seems odd to hide such useful features behind a toolbar button that's not on the default toolbar.

Macworld
For more Macintosh computing news, visit Macworld. Story copyright © 2007 Mac Publishing LLC. All rights reserved.

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