![]() We can select a format and JPEG is probably what we want to use. So now we can export it now that we reduced its size. Command 0 gets you that and that is the actual size of it which looks pretty good especially for something posted online, so certainly doing this will reduce its size. You can do zoom in, zoom out, and actual size will be zero. ![]() I'm going to use the Command + to zoom in. So we can reduce its size, maybe to 400 by 300 for instance, we can set whether or not we want it to scale, whether or not we can just pick a custom size there, you know a specific size like 320 by 240 and we can resize the image like that. Say there is something you want to post online and this is a pretty large image here. We can adjust size though which will allow us to resize this image. Not really necessarily to do with image editing. There are several different tools you've got in here, most of which have to do with annotations or making selections. I can do that by clicking this button here and it brings up this extra tool bar. Let's start off by bringing up the Editing tools. It is not as comprehensive as say using a tool like PhotoShop but there is some basic things that we can do with the image. So we're going to open an image file and once we have it opened there are a lot of things we can do to edit this. You can open up lots of different types of files in Preview like PDF's. Let me show you basic image editing using Preview. Video Transcript: Hi, this is Gary with. Check out Editing Images With Preview at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.
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