Draw directly on image or move drawn lines with image in OneNote
Is there a way to draw with pen on images that are copied to MS Onenote 2013?
When I usually draw with pen on image, lines do not add to image, so when I change the position of the image, lines remain at the first place!
microsoft-office microsoft-onenote microsoft-onenote-2013
add a comment |
Is there a way to draw with pen on images that are copied to MS Onenote 2013?
When I usually draw with pen on image, lines do not add to image, so when I change the position of the image, lines remain at the first place!
microsoft-office microsoft-onenote microsoft-onenote-2013
2
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01
add a comment |
Is there a way to draw with pen on images that are copied to MS Onenote 2013?
When I usually draw with pen on image, lines do not add to image, so when I change the position of the image, lines remain at the first place!
microsoft-office microsoft-onenote microsoft-onenote-2013
Is there a way to draw with pen on images that are copied to MS Onenote 2013?
When I usually draw with pen on image, lines do not add to image, so when I change the position of the image, lines remain at the first place!
microsoft-office microsoft-onenote microsoft-onenote-2013
microsoft-office microsoft-onenote microsoft-onenote-2013
edited Aug 18 '15 at 17:44
MC10
6,38422240
6,38422240
asked Jun 25 '15 at 7:42
hasanghaforian
5291828
5291828
2
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01
add a comment |
2
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01
2
2
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
Unfortunately not. The drawing happens over the image and isn't linked. The same is true of other drawing as well. It is frustrating that you cannot link a line to a text box for example. That's one of the minor annoyances of an otherwise great product.
You cannot group things either. The best you can do is to make sure you select the image AND the lines before moving.
I'd recommend a photo or drawing package to actually draw on the image. Or even print to PDF and use PDF annotations. You could then print to OneNote if you wanted it in one place. A pain I know.
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
add a comment |
As the accepted answer already states, this is not possible. But there is one more workaround which prevents unwanted offset to appear between the drawing and the image:
The Insert Space tool:
It can insert or remove both horizontal and vertical whitespace so all your objects move consistently together. It is simple to use because it affects the entire width or height of the page (unless there is a selection), but in the most typical situations (in simple need of additional space or removal of unnecessary space) it suffices and keeps the rest of the page content nicely together.
add a comment |
This is a pretty sweet way without having to copy paste into other programs.
- Paste the image into OneNote and mark it up.
- Use one note Screen Clipping and select the image with the markup on it. Copy it to your clipboard.
- Delete your old image with the unflattened markup, and paste the new one in with flattened markup.
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
add a comment |
You can insert a Visio diagram into the OneNote document and use Visio to markup the image.
You insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later. This keeps all of your comments/edits grouped with the image and allows you to modify your comments/edits later on.
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
add a comment |
You can draw on the image and then use the "send to OneNote" tool to capture the image and your drawing and reinsert it. If you use the Windows-N hotkey and a pen, this should only take a couple of seconds.
The downside is that you won't be able to erase your drawing afterwards but for simple notes this works great for me.
add a comment |
The following is the easiest way I know:
- Select the image together with the drawings on it
- Cut it and paste on a blank MS Word document
- Copy the image you have just pasted from MS Word document
- Paste it back to One Note
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
add a comment |
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6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Unfortunately not. The drawing happens over the image and isn't linked. The same is true of other drawing as well. It is frustrating that you cannot link a line to a text box for example. That's one of the minor annoyances of an otherwise great product.
You cannot group things either. The best you can do is to make sure you select the image AND the lines before moving.
I'd recommend a photo or drawing package to actually draw on the image. Or even print to PDF and use PDF annotations. You could then print to OneNote if you wanted it in one place. A pain I know.
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
add a comment |
Unfortunately not. The drawing happens over the image and isn't linked. The same is true of other drawing as well. It is frustrating that you cannot link a line to a text box for example. That's one of the minor annoyances of an otherwise great product.
You cannot group things either. The best you can do is to make sure you select the image AND the lines before moving.
I'd recommend a photo or drawing package to actually draw on the image. Or even print to PDF and use PDF annotations. You could then print to OneNote if you wanted it in one place. A pain I know.
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
add a comment |
Unfortunately not. The drawing happens over the image and isn't linked. The same is true of other drawing as well. It is frustrating that you cannot link a line to a text box for example. That's one of the minor annoyances of an otherwise great product.
You cannot group things either. The best you can do is to make sure you select the image AND the lines before moving.
I'd recommend a photo or drawing package to actually draw on the image. Or even print to PDF and use PDF annotations. You could then print to OneNote if you wanted it in one place. A pain I know.
Unfortunately not. The drawing happens over the image and isn't linked. The same is true of other drawing as well. It is frustrating that you cannot link a line to a text box for example. That's one of the minor annoyances of an otherwise great product.
You cannot group things either. The best you can do is to make sure you select the image AND the lines before moving.
I'd recommend a photo or drawing package to actually draw on the image. Or even print to PDF and use PDF annotations. You could then print to OneNote if you wanted it in one place. A pain I know.
answered Jun 25 '15 at 7:55
Julian Knight
12.9k11535
12.9k11535
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
add a comment |
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
See danconn's answer as another option. I came here looking for a better way to do my 'OneNote hack', but apparently Flatten just does not exist in OneNote. Too bad.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:05
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
Usually better to print the image to a PDF and mark up directly.
– Julian Knight
Sep 8 '17 at 21:22
add a comment |
As the accepted answer already states, this is not possible. But there is one more workaround which prevents unwanted offset to appear between the drawing and the image:
The Insert Space tool:
It can insert or remove both horizontal and vertical whitespace so all your objects move consistently together. It is simple to use because it affects the entire width or height of the page (unless there is a selection), but in the most typical situations (in simple need of additional space or removal of unnecessary space) it suffices and keeps the rest of the page content nicely together.
add a comment |
As the accepted answer already states, this is not possible. But there is one more workaround which prevents unwanted offset to appear between the drawing and the image:
The Insert Space tool:
It can insert or remove both horizontal and vertical whitespace so all your objects move consistently together. It is simple to use because it affects the entire width or height of the page (unless there is a selection), but in the most typical situations (in simple need of additional space or removal of unnecessary space) it suffices and keeps the rest of the page content nicely together.
add a comment |
As the accepted answer already states, this is not possible. But there is one more workaround which prevents unwanted offset to appear between the drawing and the image:
The Insert Space tool:
It can insert or remove both horizontal and vertical whitespace so all your objects move consistently together. It is simple to use because it affects the entire width or height of the page (unless there is a selection), but in the most typical situations (in simple need of additional space or removal of unnecessary space) it suffices and keeps the rest of the page content nicely together.
As the accepted answer already states, this is not possible. But there is one more workaround which prevents unwanted offset to appear between the drawing and the image:
The Insert Space tool:
It can insert or remove both horizontal and vertical whitespace so all your objects move consistently together. It is simple to use because it affects the entire width or height of the page (unless there is a selection), but in the most typical situations (in simple need of additional space or removal of unnecessary space) it suffices and keeps the rest of the page content nicely together.
edited Dec 17 '18 at 13:07
answered Jun 30 '15 at 11:50
miroxlav
7,28842466
7,28842466
add a comment |
add a comment |
This is a pretty sweet way without having to copy paste into other programs.
- Paste the image into OneNote and mark it up.
- Use one note Screen Clipping and select the image with the markup on it. Copy it to your clipboard.
- Delete your old image with the unflattened markup, and paste the new one in with flattened markup.
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
add a comment |
This is a pretty sweet way without having to copy paste into other programs.
- Paste the image into OneNote and mark it up.
- Use one note Screen Clipping and select the image with the markup on it. Copy it to your clipboard.
- Delete your old image with the unflattened markup, and paste the new one in with flattened markup.
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
add a comment |
This is a pretty sweet way without having to copy paste into other programs.
- Paste the image into OneNote and mark it up.
- Use one note Screen Clipping and select the image with the markup on it. Copy it to your clipboard.
- Delete your old image with the unflattened markup, and paste the new one in with flattened markup.
This is a pretty sweet way without having to copy paste into other programs.
- Paste the image into OneNote and mark it up.
- Use one note Screen Clipping and select the image with the markup on it. Copy it to your clipboard.
- Delete your old image with the unflattened markup, and paste the new one in with flattened markup.
answered Apr 27 '17 at 15:56
danconn
411
411
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
add a comment |
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
Bizarre that this is necessary, there should really be a Flatten option.
– Sully
Aug 29 '17 at 17:04
add a comment |
You can insert a Visio diagram into the OneNote document and use Visio to markup the image.
You insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later. This keeps all of your comments/edits grouped with the image and allows you to modify your comments/edits later on.
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
add a comment |
You can insert a Visio diagram into the OneNote document and use Visio to markup the image.
You insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later. This keeps all of your comments/edits grouped with the image and allows you to modify your comments/edits later on.
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
add a comment |
You can insert a Visio diagram into the OneNote document and use Visio to markup the image.
You insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later. This keeps all of your comments/edits grouped with the image and allows you to modify your comments/edits later on.
You can insert a Visio diagram into the OneNote document and use Visio to markup the image.
You insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later. This keeps all of your comments/edits grouped with the image and allows you to modify your comments/edits later on.
edited Mar 7 '18 at 20:26
fixer1234
17.8k144581
17.8k144581
answered Mar 6 '18 at 23:55
Stephen Hunter
311
311
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
add a comment |
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
Are you saying that you can insert some trivial (even empty) Visio diagram into the document and then use the Visio tools to markup a different image, and Visio will keep the markups with that other image?
– fixer1234
Mar 7 '18 at 0:22
1
1
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
Yes, you insert a Visio diagram and then put the image you want to markup into the embedded Visio diagram and apply whatever markups you want there. OneNote will display the marked up image as if it was a static screenshot, but you maintain the ability to go back and make edits later.
– Stephen Hunter
Mar 7 '18 at 15:31
add a comment |
You can draw on the image and then use the "send to OneNote" tool to capture the image and your drawing and reinsert it. If you use the Windows-N hotkey and a pen, this should only take a couple of seconds.
The downside is that you won't be able to erase your drawing afterwards but for simple notes this works great for me.
add a comment |
You can draw on the image and then use the "send to OneNote" tool to capture the image and your drawing and reinsert it. If you use the Windows-N hotkey and a pen, this should only take a couple of seconds.
The downside is that you won't be able to erase your drawing afterwards but for simple notes this works great for me.
add a comment |
You can draw on the image and then use the "send to OneNote" tool to capture the image and your drawing and reinsert it. If you use the Windows-N hotkey and a pen, this should only take a couple of seconds.
The downside is that you won't be able to erase your drawing afterwards but for simple notes this works great for me.
You can draw on the image and then use the "send to OneNote" tool to capture the image and your drawing and reinsert it. If you use the Windows-N hotkey and a pen, this should only take a couple of seconds.
The downside is that you won't be able to erase your drawing afterwards but for simple notes this works great for me.
answered Jun 30 '15 at 12:59
erzet
285
285
add a comment |
add a comment |
The following is the easiest way I know:
- Select the image together with the drawings on it
- Cut it and paste on a blank MS Word document
- Copy the image you have just pasted from MS Word document
- Paste it back to One Note
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
add a comment |
The following is the easiest way I know:
- Select the image together with the drawings on it
- Cut it and paste on a blank MS Word document
- Copy the image you have just pasted from MS Word document
- Paste it back to One Note
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
add a comment |
The following is the easiest way I know:
- Select the image together with the drawings on it
- Cut it and paste on a blank MS Word document
- Copy the image you have just pasted from MS Word document
- Paste it back to One Note
The following is the easiest way I know:
- Select the image together with the drawings on it
- Cut it and paste on a blank MS Word document
- Copy the image you have just pasted from MS Word document
- Paste it back to One Note
answered Dec 16 '16 at 16:24
becinyus
111
111
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
add a comment |
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
Thank you for your reply, but I did not want to use other software.
– hasanghaforian
Dec 17 '16 at 3:29
add a comment |
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2
No, because they are separate element, just like you wont ask "why I can't move the image with another image, the other image remains at the first place! " You have to select both element and move it.
– Bilo
Jun 25 '15 at 8:01