What Can the Mac Markup Do?

Markup is a useful tool in macOS that makes it possible to write or sign, draw on, crop, and rotate supported files. You can find the Mac Markup using Quick Look on your Mac or when using Quick Actions. The tool is also available with objects within certain apps, including Mail, Notes, and Photos. The features shown in Markup will vary, depending on the type of file. Among these tools are:

Sketch: Mark on a shape using a single stroke.Draw: Similiar to Sketch, this tool appears only on Macs with a Force Touch trackpad.Shapes: Use this tool to click on a shape, line, or arrow, then drag it where you want. You can also resize it.Text: Type your text, then drag the text box where you want.Highlight Section: Used to highlight selected text.Sign: Add your John Hancock using the TouchPad, built-in camera, for iPhone/iPad.Shape Style: Change the thickness and type of lines used in a shape, and add a shadow.Border Color: Change the color of the lines used in a shape.Fill Color: Change the color you’re using inside a shape.Font Style: Change the font or the font style and color.Rotate: Move the object right or left.Crop: Hide part of an item.Annotate: Annotate the item by sketching or drawing on it using your nearby iPhone or iPad (see below).

Once you’re done marking up your object, click Done.

Finding Markup

Here’s a look at the many ways you can bring up Markup on your Mac.

Quick Look

Perhaps the easiest way to use Markup is by using Quick Look to see information about a supported file. To get started:

Right-click on the file.Choose Quick Look.Click on the Markup icon at the top right.

Quick Action

To bring up the Mac Markup tool  using Quick Action:

Choose Finder on your Mac Dock.Right-click on the document.Click Quick Action.Choose Markup.

Mac Markup in Mail

If you have a PDF or image attached to an email, you can use Markup in the Mail app on your Mac.

Right-click on the object.Choose Open Attachment.Click the Markup icon at the top right.

Notes

To use markup in the native Notes app in macOS:

First, find the object you wish to mark.Right-click on the object and select Send to Preview.Click on the Markup icon in the Preview app at the top right.

Mac Markup in Photos

Finally, here’s up to Markup images within the Photos app on Mac.

Double-click on the photo you wish to mark.Choose Edit.Click the Extensions button.Select Markup.

Using Continuity Markup

Thanks to Apple’s Continuity feature, you can Markup an object on your Mac with your iPhone or iPad. For this to work, the following prerequisites need to be followed:

Your Mac and iPad, iPhone, or iPod touch have Wi-Fi and Bluetooth turned on and are signed in to iCloud with the same Apple ID using two-factor authentication.Your devices are on the latest software versions.

These features work with any Apple or third-party app designed to support them, including Pages, Numbers, Keynote, Mail, Messages, Notes, and TextEdit. Using Continuity Markup, your Mac requests a document Markup using a supported mobile device. When this occurs, you’ll see the markup being performed in real-time across both devices. In the following example, Continuity Markup is activated through Quick Look.

Right-click on the file.Choose Quick Look.Click on the Markup icon at the top right.Choose the last icon in Markup.Select your remote device from the pull-down list.

Next:

Markup to object on your mobile device. What’s happening on the remote devices is also being performed on the Mac in real-time.Tap Done on your mobile device when finished.On Mac, choose Save Changes, when applicable. You’ve saved the Markup.

Once you Markup an image or PDF file, you can save the changes and use, save, or send the file just like any other. The Markup tool on macOS is easy to use yet powerful. Use it with Quick Look, Quick Actions, or your favorite apps for images and PDF documents. Comment

Δ