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Don’t splash out on expensive image-editing software! How to edit photos, using Preview

You may only use it to view images and read the occasional PDF, but Apple’s Preview application is capable of so much more!

If you familiarise yourself with some of Preview’s lesser-known features, then you can use it to perform a range of visual edits, such as resizing, cropping, and even removing the background of your images!

Why splash out on an expensive image editing software, when you can use a free application that came pre-installed on your Mac? In this article, I’ll show you how to edit all of your images, using Preview.

Resize your images

There’s lots of reasons why you might need to resize an image – maybe you want to free up some space on your hard drive by shrinking all of your high-resolution images, or perhaps you’re uploading the image to a website that has strict criteria about the kind of images that it accepts.

You can use Preview to quickly and easily resize an image by pixels, inches, centimeters, millimeters, points or percentage:

How to crop (and un-crop!) an image

Cropping can often improve a photo, allowing you to eliminate empty, boring or distracting space surrounding the main subject of that photo.

Preview can crop an image, with the click of a button:

If you click the button only to realise that you’ve cropped the image incorrectly, then you can reverse the crop, either by:

Remove the background from an image

From time to time, you may need to remove an image’s background. Perhaps you want to replace your bland, everyday surroundings with something more exciting, or maybe you want to delete the background entirely, giving your image a transparent effect.

You can remove the background, using Preview’s “Instant Alpha” tool:

Invert your selection

Are you struggling to select the area of the image that you want to edit? Perhaps the image contains a shadow that you want to lighten, an awkwardly-shaped item that you want to delete, or an area of overexposure that needs correcting?

When an area is strangely-shaped, it may be easier to select the rest of the image, and then use Preview’s “Invert Selection” tool to switch the selection to the area that isn’t selected.

To use Invert Selection:

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