How to use it
- 1
Load the image once
Choose a local image and keep it in the editor workspace while you move through crop, rotate, and watermark steps.
- 2
Frame and orient the subject
Crop away unused space, then rotate the image if a photo, scan, or screenshot is sideways before final review.
- 3
Add visible context
Apply a short text watermark, status label, or project note when the exported copy needs ownership or review context.
- 4
Export the finished copy
Download the edited result from the browser. The original file remains unchanged, so you can start over or create another version.
Common use cases
Security and privacy
Integrated editing without upload
The Image Editor combines common image edits in the browser instead of sending the source image to a server-side editing queue. Frisbly does not need filenames, EXIF data, account identifiers, or image contents for analytics. Each export is a new copy created from the local editor state, while the source file stays under your control on the device.
Supported inputs and outputs
Supported editor inputs
- Local JPEG, PNG, AVIF, and WebP images.
- Crop controls for tighter framing.
- Rotation controls for orientation fixes.
- Text watermark controls for status, ownership, or context labels.
FAQ
Does the Image Editor upload my file?
No. The edit sequence runs in the browser, so the source image does not need to be sent to a remote service.
Why use the integrated editor instead of separate tools?
Use it when you need crop, rotate, and watermark changes in one pass. Separate tools are still useful when you only need one focused operation.
Will the original image be overwritten?
No. The editor creates a downloadable edited copy. Your original file remains unchanged unless you replace it manually outside the browser.
Can I continue with compression after editing?
Yes. Download the edited copy, then use image compression when you need a smaller file for publishing, sharing, or archiving.
What watermark text works best?
Short labels such as a brand name, draft status, date, or project name stay more readable after resizing or compression.