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Did You Know: Skitch for Visually Telling a Story

Tips and Stories | By Kasey Fleisher Hickey
skitch_birdhouse

Skitch is our awesome app that helps you draw attention to anything and share it with a colleague or a friend. For those that haven’t tried Skitch yet, we’re going to give you an introduction to using it on your Mac and Android device. We’ll also give you some ideas and tips for getting more out of Skitch and Evernote, together.

Get Skitch now! Available for free for Android and Mac »

A simpler way to get your point across

We fell in love with Skitch because it’s the easiest way to communicate everything from a simple action to a complex idea using quick annotations, screenshots and basic shapes. The best part is that using Skitch is really fun and in the process you’re getting your point across with fewer words, emails and meetings.

Skitch on your Mac

Draw Attention: Say you’re working on a new website with your team. Your designer sent you a mockup and you have some comments and suggestions. With Skitch, you can circle the part that needs to be changed and point an arrow to the area where you’d like the element moved. Add some instructional text before dragging the file into an email or into a shared notebook in Evernote. No need for a bunch of back and forth, figuring out how to save your file or hold painful conference calls where you’re all staring at four different screenshots and trying to figure out what’s going on where. Same applies for that mailbox you’re building.

Teach someone something: Explaining a new concept to someone takes a lot longer than just showing them. In the past, there was the issue of figuring out how to actually demonstrate it, how to save it, send it, and then wait for the other person to go through the same steps. With Skitch, you can walk someone through a process — a home repair, table arrangement at a wedding, or a knitting join — in the most direct way possible. For example, to show someone how to arrange a table setting, take a photo of it and annotate with text (“fork goes on the left, knife on the right’”). Keep your tutorials handy by also saving them into your Evernote account.

Key Features, at a Glance

  • Screenshot anything: Click the Snap button to capture a shot of a document, a webpage, something that inspires you, or just about anything else.
  • Drag files into other apps: Hold down the Drag Me tab and pull the file into Evernote, email, a presentation, document, your desktop, a folder in Finder, or any ‘Choose your file’ window that pops up.
  • Save files in different formats: Select your preferred file format from a pull-down menu next to the Drag Me tab.
  • Resize an image: Find the edge of the image and pull it inward or outward. Or, click on ‘Resize’ in the lower left-hand corner and enter in your preferred dimensions.
  • Share: There are a few ways to share your creations. You can drag the annotated image into email or shared Evernote notebooks. Or, you can sign into Skitch with your Evernote ID and share via the Skitch site.

Skitch on your Android phone and tablet

Remember something you like: See a piece of furniture you like and want to remember the type of wood it’s made of? Snap a photo of it with Skitch on Android and type or use your finger to write on the image. Save it to your Evernote account by tapping the elephant icon in the app. You’ll never have that, ‘What is this?’ moment again.

Eliminate words and get things done faster: Skitch lets you make a statement without using words. Snap a photo of an empty dog bowl and send it to your dog sitter to remind him to feed the dog. Need to mark something up on the go? Quickly annotate an existing image in your Evernote account using Skitch (just tap twice on the image in Evernote to open it in Skitch).

Key features, at a glance

  • Annotate images on the go: Snap a new image by tapping the camera icon once you launch Skitch, or choose an existing image to edit by tapping the photo image on the home screen or in Evernote. From there, you can resize images by pinching in and out.
  • Add Context: Tap on menu items like the pencil, arrow, finger and text icons. Select your color by tapping the color circle in the lower left-hand corner of the app. You can also draw a fresh sketch on a clean white canvas.
  • Crop: The latest update to Skitch for Android lets you quickly crop an image you have saved in Evernote by tapping on it, opening it in Skitch and cropping away.

This is only a starting point. Play around with Skitch and you’ll discover many exciting ways to use it. And stay tuned, Skitch is coming to more platforms and devices soon. Get Skitch now! Available for free for Android and Mac »

Have you been using Skitch and Evernote together? We want to hear how. Tell us in the comments!

  • Linda

    Sounds like a great app, but until it’s available for iPhone and iPad, can’t try it out…. Sorry Android people, tried an Android, love my iPhone

  • Tim

    I really want to use this, but…

    I’m an iPad toting PC user :-/

    If the success of Evernote (and other products) has taught us anything, is that ubiquity is the key to success.

  • 김자광

    good

  • Maria L. Damico

    I am an artist, taking notes with ability to SKETCH would be
    KILLER! When do you see this happening in the future, and what stylus do you all use now ? I Love my Evernote, some like to tease me – how much I “Evernote” my life & work…

  • Martin

    “…image you have saved in Evernote by tapping on it, opening it in Skitch and cropping away” and then how to safe it back into the EverNote note? I am wrestling with this. Either the soft or me must be lacking intuition. Is there a step-by-step tutorial? TNX!

  • Morten Louw Nielsen

    Hi,

    Thanks for this great initiative!

    Is it in your roadmap to store as Skitch – not as a rendered picture?
    In order to modify existing drawings.

    Kind Regards,
    Morten

  • Tom Franks

    It’s great to see two favorite applications joining forces. Looking forward to the financial reach of EN to speed up Skitch development. I frequently revise screen grabs over many iterations. I want to be able to overwrite existing images if I choose. The iterative renaming is an impediment when I work this way.

  • Laura L

    I am employed as a freelance sign language interpreter and work with numerous deaf clients each month. Each client and situation has its own vocabulary and jargon. I love using Evernote and Skitch to record new signs. I can take a picture of a client and then write on the picture of the sign using Skitch so I can remember which way the hands move to produce the sign.

  • http://www.embracingchaos.net Erwin Salazar

    Evernote has become part of my daily routine. I am sure Skitch will follow suit on my various devices. Please show Linux -Ubuntu-some love. Thanks

  • http://silverwalkhounds.org Roberta

    I found Skitch very confusing and didn’t like always doing a screenshot :( . It wouldn’t save correctly. I am on a Macbook Pro now with Snow Leopard. Any ideas to help change my mind?

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