![]() ![]() In addition to the Website (more on that below), Skitch supports uploading to Flickr, MobileMe, FTP/SFTP, and WebDAV, so you have your choice of free, paid, hosted, and your own services for sharing your images. If the Web is the final destination if your image, Skitch also has you covered. It also reduces the clutter of images piling up on your desktop. This makes it easy to drop images into chats or onto Upload buttons in Safari, or to import them into iPhoto. ![]() If you just want to save an image to your desktop or iPhoto, you click the big “Drag Me” tab at the bottom of the window and drag the edited image to the desired location or program-there’s no cumbersome Save As dialog required (although you can still use one of those if that’s how you prefer to work). On the other hand, the base version of Skitch is free, so that may be a small price to pay. account, even to save your images locally. However, I’m not hip on the fact that the company requires you to sign up for a (free) When it’s time to save or share your images, Skitch offers plenty of options. If you need to create an image with a specific size (say, to fit your blog’s template or an editor’s requirements), a real-time dimension display makes it easy to hit those marks. Skitch takes a refreshingly straightforward approach: You just drag the corner of your canvas to crop, or the corner of Skitch’s window to resize-your changes are made on the fly, as you drag. In most image-editing programs, cropping or resizing an image usually involves clunky dialogs or, if you’re lucky, a dedicated tool. Editing, saving, and sharing images are where Skitch gets really interesting. ![]()
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